Analabha Roy wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm trying to build a PVR machine that I can watch/record TV with. I was
> thinking of using the Hauppauge PVR 150/250/350 card for a tv tuner.
> However, the tv-out ports in those and similar cards seems to be either of
> the composite type or S-Video type. Unfortunately, my TV only has a 75 Ohm
> coaxial connector (the one for the analog cable for the cable-tv or VCR
> etc), no composites or S-Video. I was wondering if it is possible to
> connect the tv-out port of the card to the 75-Ohm connector of the TV using
> some sort of adapter, and whether such things are available. I googled but
> only saw adapters for composite-to-RCA or composite-to-S-Video and various
> permutations of composite, RCA and S-Video, but nothing for 75-Ohm
> coaxials.
>
> Can anyone inform/educate me as to whether this is doable?
>
>
> Thanks,
> AR
Put simply, the standard coaxial cable input to a television is meant
for one thing: accepting an RF (radio frequency) signal such as is
transmitted over the air from a television transmitter (or coming from a
cable television setup, VCR, or equivalent). So what you really need is
to convert the video and possibly the audio too into something that
passes for a broadcast-type signal. The device for the job is an RF
modulator. Sadly the process of converting good video from an S-video
jack into RF then putting it into a television then turning it back into
a video signal and then displaying it is costly in terms of quality. But
if you still want to do it, a quick read of this article might help you out:
http://hometheater.about.com/cs/dvdl...advdrfmoda.htm
--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
http://johnmcgaw.com