I have the video storm component switch and it works great. I shopped around a lot before selecting it, and I believe it is the best value. Not too expensive, and good test data to back up their specs. Plus it works with my remote control, none of that autoswitch confusion. You can find at...
I agree with that explaination. AC coupled signals can have poor low frequency response if the caps used are not large enouph. DC coupled signals have perfect low frequency response.
Bob, I really have to disagree with you on this. When a signal is rated at 35 Mhz (for HDTV), it means that the bandwidth NEVER exceeds that value. A device with 60Mhz bandwidth is just as good as 90 Mhz bandwidth for HDTV. The only spec that matters is what the loss is at 30 Mhz and below...
I have the Video-Storm CSW02 and it works great. It is 4 input with 2 output and has digital audio (rca only). Picture is perfect in HD, but the real reason I think it is worth it is the remote interface. It can learn the IR codes from any remote, so you don't need a seperate remote or macros...
I have the Video-Storm CSW02 and it works great. It is 4 input with 2 output and has digital audio (rca only). Picture is perfect in HD, but the real reason I think it is worth it is the remote interface. It can learn the IR codes from any remote, so you don't need a seperate remote or macros...
I had the ShinyBow switch, but it had some strange interferance problems. Seems like one of the inputs would cause noise on the others. I replaced it with the Video-Storm switch (CSW02 I think), and now have a perfect picture. The remote interface is great too, doesn't need a seperate remote.
I had the ShinyBow switch, but it had some strange interferance problems. Seems like one of the inputs would cause noise on the others. I replaced it with the Video-Storm switch (CSW02 I think), and now have a perfect picture. The remote interface is great too, doesn't need a seperate remote.