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HD DV in ?Posted by Logan6
Does anyone know of flat screens with a DV in? (preferrably around 20"
![]() thank you.
Logan6 Wrote:
------------------------------------------------------- > Does anyone know of flat screens with a DV in? > (preferrably around 20" ![]() > workstation hooked up to an older GL1 through 1394 > and then from there using a S video cable out to > an NTSC monitor. It would be nice if the monitor > just had DV in (1394 firewire in). Does anyone > have any suggestions? make? model? > > thank you. I have a Sharp Aquous 32" LCD HighDef Screen attached to my Mac via the HDMI connection. Have also used the DVI input. I get georgeous screen resolution with either one, although I think the HDMI connection gives higher resolution. In my office, most everyone is getting flat screens for their computers and I've found that my videos in QuickTime play clear and bright on PCs (not any Macs in office). I don't make DVDs or output for "television", but on my large screen, even some family DVDs I've created play beautifully. I use this screen while I'm editing in FCP. Regards, Cyrus iMac 27" Intel i7 Quad-Core; 16GB RAM; 2TB HD Final Cut Studio, FCP X, Photoshop CS5, After Effects, etc.
Don't throw out the glass monitors just yet. Yes, it's grand to cut on large flat panels, but remember those panels don't refresh fast enough to show you flicker or interlace problems.
[www.kozco.com] This harmless looking video, for example, looks very different on a flat panel than it does on a glass monitor. The Field ID numbers in the upper right are intended to flicker very badly. If you just see a smooth "1" and "2" overlayed, then you will never see video flicker problems. If you only see "1" or only "2", then you're only watching half of your video. The FCP Canvas View does this. Koz
thanks for the input. However, this doesn't help as I am using both of my DVI outs on my G5 for LCD computer monitors. Right, I like to look at TV color space not computer. I'm just rying to eliminate the GL1 passthrough camera.
I need a Firewire 1394 input (DV in) on the new flat panel HD TV. How is everyone else hooking up their NTSC monitor on a basic FCP editing workstation?
#8 External Monitor Viewing.
Shane's Stock Answer #8: A simple path is mac > firewire > camera or deck > rca cables > tv Then start up your camera and tv, then open fcp. Then go View > External video > all frames Video playback should be Apple firewire NTSC (If you are using an NTSC set) Audio playback should be Audio follows Video Techinially, this should send synched video to your TV ![]() www.shanerosseditor.com Listen to THE EDIT BAY Podcast on iTunes [itunes.apple.com]
<<<A simple path is mac > firewire > camera or deck > rca cables > tv >>>
Which generally gives you pictures about 7% too dark. If you care about calibration, you need to put the colorbar signal up and adjust as necessary. If all you're doing is watching for flicker and general motion problems, this works right out of the box. Koz
Logan --
For what it's worth, I use the Kona LH and view on a Circuit City-bought Philips 20" TV with RCA-component inputs. With the Kona I can monitor 23.98 HD sequences as well as NTSC. I love it -- I can see what my picture "really" looks like. I just don't trust LCD for proper representation. I have in the past also used the S-Video input using an Aurora Fuse-X card for plain old NTSC and I absolutely loved that too. Good luck! kth
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