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-   -   Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=46259)

Ed September 18th 06 01:22 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


George September 18th 06 06:46 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
Ed wrote:
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, ...


Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen


you could always get a 4:3 TV with a 16:9 mode - generates a "letterbox"
view, but will keep the correct ratio.

George

>{daZza} September 18th 06 07:40 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
Ed wrote:
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a tuner
and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is just a
display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)

--
daZza....................

remove _mypants_ to reply
www.thekellyhouse.co.uk



Gus Ulton September 18th 06 08:14 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a tuner
and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is just a
display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)



A workable solution might be to get a TV card for his computer, a monitor, a
dual output video graphic card and an extra long VGA cable and route the
cable from his PC to the monitor in the kitchen. Of course, the ability to
do this depends on exactly how far his PC is away from the kitchen, but you
can get upto 25m length cable. I've currently got a 10m length cable from
my PC to the monitor and it works fine. The issue over switching channels
can be sorted by a digi sender type thing, I suppose. Somebody else in here
can probably give you advice on those.



John September 19th 06 09:01 AM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 18:14:51 GMT, "Gus Ulton"
wrote:

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a tuner
and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is just a
display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)



A workable solution might be to get a TV card for his computer, a monitor, a
dual output video graphic card and an extra long VGA cable and route the
cable from his PC to the monitor in the kitchen. Of course, the ability to
do this depends on exactly how far his PC is away from the kitchen, but you
can get upto 25m length cable. I've currently got a 10m length cable from
my PC to the monitor and it works fine. The issue over switching channels
can be sorted by a digi sender type thing, I suppose. Somebody else in here
can probably give you advice on those.

A workable solution might be a video sender/receiver, no need for
cable of any length....

--
Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com


Nigel Barker September 19th 06 11:03 AM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 18:40:10 +0100, "{daZza}" [email protected]"BUT PLUG"gmail.com
wrote:

Ed wrote:
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a tuner
and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is just a
display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)


A TV tuner plus other gubbins would hardly cost 131 pounds!

--
Nigel Barker
Live from the sunny Cote d'Azur

charles September 19th 06 12:04 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
In article ,
Nigel Barker wrote:
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 18:40:10 +0100, "{daZza}" [email protected]"BUT PLUG"gmail.com
wrote:


Ed wrote:
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed


The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a
tuner and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is
just a display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)


A TV tuner plus other gubbins would hardly cost 131 pounds!


No, but redesigning the case to find room for the extras and then setting
up a production line to make it and another to fit the extra bits doesn't
cost nothing. And prices are "what the market will bear". If people will
pay £280, then the price is right.

I did note yesterday that a USB Freeview tuner seems to be marketted at
about £100.

--
From KT24 - in "Leafy Surrey"

Using a RISC OS computer running v5.11


Nigel Barker September 19th 06 01:22 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 11:04:53 +0100, charles
wrote:

In article ,
Nigel Barker wrote:
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 18:40:10 +0100, "{daZza}" [email protected]"BUT PLUG"gmail.com
wrote:


Ed wrote:
Hi there

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280.

Any recommendations? It has to be widescreen as it will take the same
feed as the bedroom TV from the RF2 out on the digibox and I dont want
the picture squashed to fit a 4:3 screen

cheers
ed

The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt contain a
tuner and all the other gubbins to display a tv picture, a monitor is
just a display device to display a video signal which rf is not (IIRC)


A TV tuner plus other gubbins would hardly cost 131 pounds!


No, but redesigning the case to find room for the extras and then setting
up a production line to make it and another to fit the extra bits doesn't
cost nothing. And prices are "what the market will bear". If people will
pay £280, then the price is right.

I did note yesterday that a USB Freeview tuner seems to be marketted at
about £100.


I don't know where you go shopping for PC parts but that seems awfully pricey. A
USB stick Freeview tuner can be had for just 21 pounds
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/108219/rb/21859387254 while even a Hauppauge
branded USB Freeview tuner is under 40 pounds
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/113962/rb/21859387254

Perhaps a better comparison would be with a standalone Freeview Set Top Box
which can be found for as little as 16 pounds
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/116278/rb/21859302631.
I am sure that is more than equivalent to a tuner & gubbins.

--
Nigel Barker
Live from the sunny Cote d'Azur

>{daZza} September 19th 06 03:31 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 
The reason the pc monitor is cheaper is because it doesnt
contain a tuner and all the other gubbins to display a tv
picture, a monitor is just a display device to display a video
signal which rf is not (IIRC)


A TV tuner plus other gubbins would hardly cost 131 pounds!


snip


I did note yesterday that a USB Freeview tuner seems to be
marketted at about £100.


snip


I don't know where you go shopping for PC parts but that seems
awfully pricey. A USB stick Freeview tuner can be had for just 21
pounds http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/108219/rb/21859387254 while
even a Hauppauge branded USB Freeview tuner is under 40 pounds
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/113962/rb/21859387254

Perhaps a better comparison would be with a standalone Freeview Set
Top Box which can be found for as little as 16 pounds
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/116278/rb/21859302631.
I am sure that is more than equivalent to a tuner & gubbins.


Errrrrr no, show me how you can connect a set-top/usb freeview tuner
DIRECTLY to an lcd monitor to produce a picture????

You seem to forget that after the usb freeview tuner "stick" is a computer
containing a graphics card, memory, processor, hdd and a MB to connect them
all together, not forgetting the software to make it all work, now that
sounds like about £131 doesnt it??

It it was that easy/cheap then why do these useless little things still cost
so much???
http://www.comet.co.uk/comet/html/cache/507_824959.html


--
daZza....................

remove _mypants_ to reply
www.thekellyhouse.co.uk



Steve K September 19th 06 04:22 PM

Small TVs/PC monitors that have coaxial input
 

I am looking for a TV/monitor to go in the kitchen, I dont need it to
be able to do anything apart from display a tv signal via coaxial
cable, but I am confused as to why I can get a 17" widescreen PC
monitor for £149 but cant get a TV that size for under £280


I recently bought an LCD for my kitchen, I found that the price difference
for 15" to 17" was around £50.00 and thus opted for the 15" model. If you
shop around you be able to get a 15" LCD TV around £150 (unless you want a
top name branded model), as you don't need freeview etc there are quite a
lot to choose from.

The model I purchased was £149.99 (from Argos)

Ebuyer has a 15" widescreen available for £139.98 (there will probably be
delivery to add) see
http://www.ebuyer.com/customer/produ...103632&_LOC=UK





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