<br><div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><br>Hmm - well I'm pretty much out of my depth now! But in your place I<br>wouldn't have added both video sources. How do you know which one's
<br>being used? If I remember right you can press 'Y' or 'C' to change<br>sources, so see what that does. But as I said, I'd keep things simple<br>and only define the source I want to use (and given a choice between<br>
composite and S-Video I'd choose S-Video).
</blockquote><div><br><br>I don't know but I thought it worked like this: Since I've defined two channels on two inputs with two different video sources, I have channel 600 as the composite input and channel 601 is the S-Video input. I think pressing Y or C was removed just before
0.19, and now myth just relies on the channel number to work out which input to use.<br><br>Rather than a mythtv problem, I think this is a linux video problem, since tvtime shows it in black and white too. Maybe the S-Video lead would be better, however when I was testing in tvtime both composite and S-Video were B/W. Also I only have one S-Video cable (at the moment), and that links my graphics card to the TV so I don't want to use it all the time. At a guess I'd say if its possible to get colour on the S-Video lead, it should also be possible to get it on the composite, so I'll stick with composite for now.
<br><br>Thanks,<br><br>Jonny<br> </div></div>