Tom's Guide Forums
  Tom's Guide Forums » Graphic & Displays » Graphics Cards » HTPC - Video Card - For Projector viewing
 




Word :   Username :  
 
Bottom
Author
 Thread : HTPC - Video Card - For Projector viewing
 
More Information

Hi, I am building a HT PC using a NVIDIA 7600 (512Mb) card, a Gigabyte MoBo with DVI/SPIF output, 1Gb RAM, 800Gb HDD, Gigabit LAN and using DVD X Pro to read DVD (discs and ISO images). All's connected via DVI & SPIF to a Denon HDMI port (Denon 4306) to be switched to a ceiling mounted projector (Mitsubishi HC 5000).

Problem: the contrast & colour are poor - even with the original disc in the PC. No difference with the ISO images (Accessible from server via CAT 6 cabling). About 50% as sharp & bright as with a dedicated DVD player (Denon 1920).

Questions: can this be rectified using a NVIDIA 8800GT card (supposedly the best for HD / Blu Ray viewing)? Should I consider 2x 7600 cards using SLI route? or Am I heading down the wrong track? What should I be doing?

The films look great on a 22" LCD screen. It could be that the screen is too large (96" ).

Any sage advice would be appreciated. Thanks. Pham

Related Product

Register or log in to remove.

More Information

With such little info as to your complete OS and video software configuration it can be difficult to give a very good answer as to what benefit upgradeing your video card would give. My first guess would be that the problem is actually in software.
First guess, DVD decoder, i.e. PowerDVD is not set as default decoder. There is a software program from Microsoft that will allow you to choose the "preferred decoder" .

Link: http://www.microsoft.com/downloads [...] laylang=en

I would try this first because unless you are planning on playing HD or BLUray the video card you have is WAY more than enough.

Good luck


Message edited by TimBog on 01-05-2008 at 05:25:14 AM
More Information

Thanks,

I use XP Pro and DVD X Pro to process the DVD (discs and ISO images).

My objective is to project the DVD ISO image (stored on server - for space & access purposes) onto the 96" screen using the DVD X Pro.

As mentioned, the image seen on a LCD screen (up to 22" ) is perfect.

The problem is when the same image is projected onto the wide screen. My guess is that there is some problem between 22" and 96".

Many thanks, Pham

More Information

Have you played around with any of the settings in the Nvidia control panel? Have you tried to adjust the picture settings on the projector itself?


---------------
http://valid.x86-secret.com/cache/banner/376871.pnghttp://valid.x86-secret.com/cache/banner/327043.png
More Information

Yep. Nvidia control panel will have gamma, brightness, and contrast controls.


---------------
Core2 E6750 @3.68 Ghz
(on Asus P5K)
Wintec DDR2-800 2 GB
Geforce 8800 GTX and Radeon 2900 XT
Samsung 245BW 24" LCD
More Information

My guess it is an issue with your projector. I am not familiar at all with projectors, but if things are displayed fine on your LCD then the video card should not be the probelm.

Did you dim or turn off the lights?


---------------
Q9450 |Corsair XMS 4GB DDR 800 | ABit IP35 Pro | X1900XT 512MB | Audigy 2 | Seasonic S12 550 | Cooler Master Centurion 532 | NEC LCD2690WUXi

There is no such thing as a stupid question.
But there are stupid people.
More Information

Check the "TV" settings in the Nvidia Control panel. I'm pretty sure they give more in depth options designed specifically for such displays.


---------------
GIGABYTE GA-P35-DS4 v2.0
Intel Core2 Q6600 @ 3.3Ghz
4GB OCZ Reaper DDR2 800 @ 915Mhz
EVGA 8800GTS 512MB G92
More Information

what resolution are you playing back through projector, dont forget DVD is only 720x576 (PAL) 720x480 (NTSC).
on a screen that size you should be playing HD 720p or 1080p


---------------
Maximus Formula | Q6600 G0 @ 3.4ghz | T.R.U.E.
8800GT(700/1750/950)HR-03 GT | 4gb Dominator 1066 555-15 | Corsair HX620
More Information

try ati!


Go to:
 
  Tom's Guide Forums » Graphic & Displays » Graphics Cards » HTPC - Video Card - For Projector viewing

Google ads