![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially
around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? Forgot to mention, I also have 2 hdmi, could they be of use? |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? Correct -- Tumbleweed email replies not necessary but to contact use; tumbleweednews at hotmail dot com |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Tumbleweed" wrote in message ... "Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? Correct Thanks Tumbleweed. I thought maybe using better scarts might help, but if not, I will not bother wasting my money. Its a shame because when the channels are good they are very good, but bad channels are quite distracting. |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... "Tumbleweed" wrote in message ... "Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? Correct Thanks Tumbleweed. I thought maybe using better scarts might help, but if not, I will not bother wasting my money. Its a shame because when the channels are good they are very good, but bad channels are quite distracting. If the detail isnt there to start with, you cant improve it by changing connectors. (Except on CSI where they can seemingly start with a single pixel and blow it up to show a detailed image :-) -- Tumbleweed email replies not necessary but to contact use; tumbleweednews at hotmail dot com |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Tumbleweed" wrote in message ... If the detail isnt there to start with, you cant improve it by changing connectors. (Except on CSI where they can seemingly start with a single pixel and blow it up to show a detailed image :-) But CSI is special after all ;-) |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Beck" [email protected] wrote in message ... I see quite a bit of compression on some channels on my hd tv. Especially around text on screen, things look pixelated. I am pretty sure it is not my TV because not all channels are like it. The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? Like better cables or something. Currently the sky box runs through scart to DVD which runs to TV also via scart. The scarts are of low quality, would a better scart improve anything? What about if I moved the xbox 360 to vga and sent the sky and dvd through component leads? Or is this a fruitless exercise? Buy a smaller telly. |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
Beck wrote:
The BBC channels are particularly good and the cheaper channels like UKTV ones are quite bad. And the shopping/babe/dating channels will be worse. As I understand it, broadcasters use compression and some use more than others, which would explain the difference in the better channels. Yes. I was wondering though if there is anything I can do myself to improve it a little? No. -- Digibox problem? : A reboot solves 90% of these. The Sky Digital FAQ: http://tinyurl.com/8vef5 UK TV overseas: http://tinyurl.com/6p73 BBC/ITV reception trouble? ; http://www.astra2d.com/ ---- Only the truth as I see it. No monies return'd. ;-) |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| More Evidence of the Death of OTA | Bob Miller | High definition TV | 42 | November 30th 06 08:23 PM |
| Audio compression does not even give FM quality | Agamemnon | UK digital tv | 40 | November 2nd 05 04:12 PM |
| DISH starting price war against Murdock? | Al | Satellite dbs | 103 | January 5th 04 07:39 AM |
| DirecTV compression questions | starman | Satellite dbs | 11 | December 6th 03 04:59 AM |
| OTA HD Broadcasting | [email protected] | High definition TV | 7 | September 15th 03 01:51 AM |