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Component to HDMI Converter, Portta YPbPr Component RGB + R/L Audio to HDMI Converter v1.3 Support 1080P 24bit 2 Channel Audio LPCM for HDTV PS3 PS4 HDVD Player Wii XBOX and More

£9.9£99Clearance
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The highest resolution you’ll get is 1080p/60. Just like with the other converters mentioned above. Converts FROM a Component Video & 2RCA Stereo source TO a HDMI display with user-selectable 720p or 1080p upscaling. There are UHD capable receivers now with component inputs and the ability to upconvert to HDMI for not nearly as much money as you would have paid for that Denon at the time of its release all those years ago. The bandwidth supported is 165MHz/1.65Gbps for each channel. That makes it 6.75Gbps for all available channels.

By the way, a component to HDMI converter is different from an HDMI to component video converter. A component to HDMI converter refers to devices that convert component source media like the Nintendo Wii, classic 2000s DVD players, early release Blu-Ray players with a 1080i input, and older generation VCRs and so forth into HDMI-compatible signals for HDTVs, monitors, and projectors. This is in contrast to modern BD and DVD players linking up to vintage TVs with component outputs. See more: What is a Component Cable? Everything You Need to Know #10 EASYCEL Component to HDMI Converter As you would have already known, HDMI is a single cable that carries high-definition video and audio. Can You Use the Converter to Convert HDMI to Component Video? This Component to HDMI converter will work with devices with component video output like DVD players, PSP, Xbox 360, PS2, and Nintendo NGC. Thanks, I'm aware of all of that, but I'd still like to use my old Xbox, so what I'd really like to know is....Frankly how you can expect to watch a such an old games console with a high end TV is expecting a lot. To use your new TV at lest to get a half decent picture and audio you need at least. one of these : HDMI ports have no facility to accept analogue signals so a simple plug adaptor is a highly nonstandard items and won't work on the vast majority of devices - including your C9. A component video to HDMI converter accepts YPbPr video and RCA audio (Left-Right) from the source equipment and converts them to a single digital video signal that is compatible with an HDMI connection. Component could do HD, but as it could be copied hdmi was introduced which meant that HD outputs from component were removed.

It's not as if it's required to be used for everything transmitted over HDMI. As far as I'm aware even brand new consoles don't use it for gaming. I'm looking at component to HDMI converters now. Some say it support 'HDCP 1.3' where as others support only 'HDCP 1.2'. What does this mean, and ultimately does it make a difference to the picture quality please? This is all I need to know please. I've googled HDCP but still don't understand if this affects the picture or not? I appreciate upgrading the amp will cost more, but it'll be a much neater solution and avoid any trial and error with various adaptors, plus it'll really compliment your new high-end TV and allow you to get the best from it. Your amp is so far outdated and you are trying to use a TV with more than 4 times the resolution of the output of your box, it will never work. The manufacturer promises lifetime technical support should you run into problems when using this component video to HDMI converter.

There's always a bits of hardware around that output the signals through non-standard ports due to space restrictions. If you’re worried about it not working like in the isolated case of a PS2 not getting upscaled for HDTV usage, keep in mind that it’s consistently rated high by the majority of its verified buyers. We particularly recommend this specific EASYCEL converter mainly for its audio processing prowess. Even if your 14-year-old MVP 861 DVD Player doesn’t have HDMI connections, it should play nice 480p content converted to a nice and smooth 1080p experience at your HDTV flat-panel LCD display of choice at the fraction of the cost of a new DVD or BD player. It has all the trimmings you’ve come to expect from a high-caliber converter that belongs to a list like this, such as the high-fidelity conversion of various supported resolutions such as an input of 480i/p at 60Hz, 576i/p at 50Hz, 720p at 50/60Hz, 1080i/p at 50/60Hz and an output of 480p, 576p, 720p at 60Hz, 1080p at 60Hz, and 4K at 60Hz. As the consumers of such converters demand, the Anber-Tech Converter also works great at converting the PS2 signal into something readable on an HDTV screen. It even offers support on not only DVD and early Blu-Ray Players but also cable/satellite boxes with component video inputs. Surely the Xbox has HDMI out so why use component ? The C9 has HDCP 2,2 ports but mine works fine with a legacy 1080 source passed through my denon receiver. Why not connect the X-box to a HDMI in on the receiver and the monitor out to the C9 ?

Thank you, dodgy sales tactics was as I suspected. The fact that it's mentioned in the bullet points suggested it might make a difference, so just wanted to be sure it didn't affect picture quality. Will go for the 1.2 version as is half the price.The Portta Is a YPbPr Conversion Expert: The Portta Component to HDMI Converter is quite simply a ridiculously good component to HDMI converter that Nintendo Wii players recommend to each other when making the leap from their standard CRT television sets to their fully HDTV widescreen display appliances the size of what you’d expect a conference room whiteboard would be. If you want to play the Wii as though it’s large and in charge, you won’t go wrong with Portta and its R/L audio and YPbPr component RGB video conversion to pure digital HDMI signals with relatively no loss in video resolution and sound fidelity whether you watch it in native resolution or stretched to fill the screen. If you were to choose a new AV amp with care, you should be able to connect older consoles and the like via component or possibly even s-video/RCA video/audio inputs and the receiver would scale everything up to 4K and output via HDMI to the TV. The main way to play the 1990s and 2000s component media players, CDs, DVDs, cable/satellite boxes, VCRs, LaserDiscs, and retro gaming consoles from PlayStation 1 and 2 to the Xbox and Xbox 360, as well as the GameCube and Nintendo Wii, is the use of component adapters or converters. The unit is powered through a micro 5V USB cable. Cable length will not satisfy you and you must have the unit close to a power source or your TV USB port.

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