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<div><span class="gmail_quote">On 21/02/2008, <b class="gmail_sendername">Tim Phipps</b> <<a href="mailto:mythtv-users@phipps-hutton.freeserve.co.uk">mythtv-users@phipps-hutton.freeserve.co.uk</a>> wrote:</span>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid">Michael Skaastrup wrote:<br>> There is some overscan in live tv which I expected but the image is not<br>
> perfectly centered and OSD menu is slightly off screen to the left.<br>><br>> Can this be remedied?<br><br>I don't think you can fix the image centering apart from adjusting the<br>TV set (don't do it, there's high voltage in there). I think you may be<br>
able to edit the OSD theme to move it around, but I've not tried it so I<br>don't know the details.<br><br>>> That's going to have a de-interlacer running even in 720x576Noscale so<br>>> you might have to live with a bit of smearing with interlaced action.<br>
>> Films might be OK.<br>><br>> You are rigth on. I get a little smearing or blurriness on action. Can i<br>> solve this by de-interlacing output?<br><br>I doubt it. De-interlacing always compromises the picture quality, doing<br>
it twice will probably make it worse. Since your TV-out is 50Hz<br>interlaced and you TV-set is 100Hz (interlaced?) you will have to have a<br>deinterlacer of some sort. I think the only way to not have motion smear<br>is to have MythTV use onefield de-interlace. But then you lose half the<br>
vertical resolution. It won't get any better with LCD/plasma/OLED either<br>since they're all progressive technologies and the broadcast stuff looks<br>like sticking with interlaced. Anyone know if projectors can do interlaced?<br>
<br>Cheers,<br>Tim.<br><br>_______________________________________________<br>mythtv-users mailing list<br><a href="mailto:mythtv-users@mythtv.org">mythtv-users@mythtv.org</a><br><a href="http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users">http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users</a><br>
</blockquote></div>
<div><br>Michael,</div>
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<div>Seeing as you are in Europe, your best bet for the BEST quality picture is going to be a RGB to SCART lead.</div>
<div>MUCH better than composite video, and you get to design the output mode yourself, so no black bars etc...</div>
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<div>See the Wiki for details....</div>
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<div>Cheers</div>
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<div>Steve</div>