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Can you convert DVI to component or s-video?

TheInternal

Senior member
Howdy. I have an old TV I use in the living room that only goes up to component or s-video. I have a Fermi card that has neither of those outputs. From a quick google search, I've seen little adapters for $10-$20 that physically connect to a DVI out and sport component outs on the other side... anyone know if such a thing would work with a Geforce GTX 550 Ti?

If so, any suggestions on which one to get?
 
Howdy. I have an old TV I use in the living room that only goes up to component or s-video. I have a Fermi card that has neither of those outputs. From a quick google search, I've seen little adapters for $10-$20 that physically connect to a DVI out and sport component outs on the other side... anyone know if such a thing would work with a Geforce GTX 550 Ti?

If so, any suggestions on which one to get?

Nope... there is a big chance they will not work... You need an active adatper that converts digital signal (DVI) to analog signals (Component)... those run about $80 or more...
 
Nope... there is a big chance they will not work... You need an active adatper that converts digital signal (DVI) to analog signals (Component)... those run about $80 or more...

Ahh.. active adapters, brings back memories.

I still have an x2vga 1, and x2vga 2, they converted component to VGA :biggrin:
 
Nope... there is a big chance they will not work... You need an active adatper that converts digital signal (DVI) to analog signals (Component)... those run about $80 or more...


Just to pick nits here, but I'm pretty sure those cards don't have DVD-D connectors, but in fact have DVD-I (which contains the VGA signal on different pins). VGA to component is a passive conversion.

Not sure why on earth you'd want to use that kind of connector, but hey, more power to you.
 
Just to pick nits here, but I'm pretty sure those cards don't have DVD-D connectors, but in fact have DVD-I (which contains the VGA signal on different pins). VGA to component is a passive conversion.

Not sure why on earth you'd want to use that kind of connector, but hey, more power to you.

They may have DVI-I, but just because the pictures show the ports or that is the port on the card still doesn't necessarly indicate the hardware supports it... All I see on the specs are DVI "Dual Link" listed on the Specs...
 
It is the rare card that is dvi-d and not i. I've never even owned one since dvi became the standard.
 
It is the rare card that is dvi-d and not i. I've never even owned one since dvi became the standard.
I've only seen them on mobos and monitors (2xDVI-I video card + DVI-D cable + DVI-D-only monitor: fun non-functional workstation).

The old Mac Mini could go S-video and composite with a passive adapter, so the possibility is there, but I'm not sure about the OP's card.
 
some cards and a lot of motherboards with onboard video have DVI-D.

but yeah vga to component is a passive thing. so in theory you could go dvi-i to vga to component.

its easy to tell dvi-i from d, the I ports, have one huge block of pins then a small section that looks like a cross to the right of it. the D doesnt have the small section and just has a slit there.
 
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