HELP Connecting TV to Computer

BranzLS

Senior member
Jul 11, 2002
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I have a Gainward Ge Force 4 Ti4600 video card in my computer, and I am wondering what I need to do (if possible) to connect my computer to my TV for watching movies and such off my computer but on my TV. Is this possible and if so, how? If not, what would I need to do such a thing? Thanks
 

modedepe

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May 11, 2003
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Most cards which have tv out have an s-video connection. If your tv has an s-vid input just hook it up with that. If your tv has composite input then you'll need a dongle that plugs into the s-vid out jack on your card. If your tv only has coxial then you'll need some other converter or a vcr or something.
 

BranzLS

Senior member
Jul 11, 2002
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I believe I need the COMPOSITE & S VIDEO Connector for the Gainward GeForce 4 Ti4600 card.... where can I buy this? What does it run and does anyone have any experience with it?
 

modedepe

Diamond Member
May 11, 2003
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Ok, I'm kind of confused by what you mean when you say you need the s-video and composite connector. Look on your card and see what kind of outputs it has and then report back :)
 

BranzLS

Senior member
Jul 11, 2002
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I was looking on the Gainward site and read something about it... I am confused as to wether I have to buy it or if I have it. I will check when I get home... it should be on the back of the card, correct?
 

modedepe

Diamond Member
May 11, 2003
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Yes, it'll be on the back. You will at least have a dvi or vga out on the back of the card, which you hook your monitor up to.
 

Boobers

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Jun 28, 2001
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You will be very disappointed after you hook your comp to your TV (using S-video or composite). It will look horrible and text will be practically unreadable. I have mine hooked to an HDTV using the 15-pin VGA cable and it is mearly OK...
 

NYHoustonman

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Dec 8, 2002
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OK, your video card DOES have S-Video out, so either your TV has an S-Video in, in which case just get an S-Video cable and connect the two, or it doesn't, in which case, get a S-Video to composite adapter (composite is the yellow wire usually) and a composite cable and connect the two. Then set it up through your graphics card properties.

And, yes, picture quality is (obviously) lower, but for watching movies it is just fine.
 

NYHoustonman

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Dec 8, 2002
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I've tried it, and frankly, for watching movies, it looks better on the TV. I have a music video that is sharp on my monitor (1280x0124) only when it takes up around half/third the screen, and it looks like a music video straight from TV on the TV.

EDIT-No idea about that movie editing thing.
 

BranzLS

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Jul 11, 2002
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Good deal, I plan to hook it all up then! So pretty much since my video card has an s video connection, I can just run it to my s-video connection on my TV and that's it? Flip the power on the TV and it will be good to go?
 

modedepe

Diamond Member
May 11, 2003
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Yeah it should work like that. Hopefully you won't have any problems. On your other question, I guess you're trying to convert from one type, such as avi, to another, like mpeg1 or 2? I'm not sure with that program, since I've never used it. On TMPGEnc I put it on "full screen (keep aspect ratio)." With that setting the picture doesn't take up all the screen, but it isn't stretched all weird either. I'm not sure if that really answers your question, hopefully it will help a little at least.
 

NYHoustonman

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Dec 8, 2002
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Originally posted by: BranzLS
Good deal, I plan to hook it all up then! So pretty much since my video card has an s video connection, I can just run it to my s-video connection on my TV and that's it? Flip the power on the TV and it will be good to go?

Yep, from there just make sure you may have to swith the input on the TV to whatever the S-Video on it is (for me it's input 1), and enable the second display in the NVidia control panel. And, for me at least, the highest resolution I can display without the desktop turning into something like a map from a strategy game (can't fit the entire map on the screen, so you have to use the mouse to navigate around) is 1024x768.