Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)
If a given TV has a connection labelled Y/Pb/Pr, is this always a
*progressive* component video (like a HDTV-ready set would have), or is
it sometimes just plain component video? My TV has a Y/Pb/Pr
connection, but the manual says absolutely nothing about it at all.
(The TV is a Sony Wega KV-32FS17)
--
"No urban night is like the night [in NYC]...here is our poetry, for we
have pulled down the stars to our will."
- Ezra Pound, poet and critic, 9/18/1912, reflecting on New York City
Archived from groups: alt.tv.tech.hdtv (More info?)
No, it doesn't mean it's progressive. It may very well only accept the
plain old 480i signal. You should be able to find out fairly easily by
hooking up your DVD player and flipping the progressive scan switch on it.
If the TV supports progressive scan you'll get a picture, if not the tv will
be blank.
I just Googled your set and I don't see anything in the specs about it being
progressive. I'm assuming it probably is not.
Brad
"Keeper of the Purple Twilight" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:2004090820155650073%no@spaminvalid...
> If a given TV has a connection labelled Y/Pb/Pr, is this always a
> *progressive* component video (like a HDTV-ready set would have), or is it
> sometimes just plain component video? My TV has a Y/Pb/Pr connection, but
> the manual says absolutely nothing about it at all. (The TV is a Sony
> Wega KV-32FS17)
> --
> "No urban night is like the night [in NYC]...here is our poetry, for we
> have pulled down the stars to our will."
> - Ezra Pound, poet and critic, 9/18/1912, reflecting on New York City
>
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