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Composite monitor

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This is an early example of a composite monitor with color graphics marketed for home use.
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This is an early example of a composite monitor with color graphics marketed for home use.

A composite monitor is any analog video display that receives input in the form of an analog composite video signal through a single cable — in contrast to multiple-cable or multiple-wire video sources such as VGA cable. A monitor is different from a conventional TV set because it does not have an internal RF tuner or RF converter that can receive signals from an over-the-air broadcast TV station; however a user can install an external device that emulates a TV tuner (e.g. VCR, cable box, etc.) . A video display that is a "monitor-only" is useful for security cameras, some computers, and many other devices.

Inputs

Composite monitors often have RCA jacks or BNC connectors for video input. Older (1970s) used UHF connectors.

Composite and S-Video are used in PAL and NTSC regions.

Composite monitors can be VERY high quality, with professional broadcast reference displays costing $10k-$15k (US) in year 2000 dollars.

Note that all composite monitors imply the use of a CRT for display, and for color signals anyway, the composite signal must be "decoded" into its three components of red, green and blue to be fed to each gun of the CRT. A critical factor in the quality of this display is the type of "encoding" that is used in the TV camera to combine the signal together and the type of "decoding" that is used in the TV set to separate the signals back to RGB for display.

Comb filters are frequently used to improve the quality of a composite monitor, and devices using the [Faroudja] decoders are frequently considered the pinnacle of composite displays, at least for the NTSC market.

Early innovations of this technology

Originally, these monitors were used for commercial studios. Composite video was first had home use for dubbing tapes on VCRs. Also, one of the first stand-alone composite monitors for home use were on home computers..

Problems to overcome

Nowadays, AV devices with advanced technology don't have Channel 3/4 outputs (e.g. DVD players, video game consoles, etc.). One major exception to this is a TiVo DVR. People often use RF modulators to overcome the problem of a TV set not having composite or S-Video inputs. Another method of this is that some game systems have their own RF converter without the bulkiness of an RF modulator.

Sometimes, if somebody were to have a stand-alone composite monitor; they would be unable to use old-type game systems (e.g. Atari 2600, NES 2, etc.) that only have channel 3/4 outputs for conventional TVs. Sometimes, using a VCR would overcome that problem since most VCRs have TV tuners built in.

These problems could explain why every composite monitor marketed to consumers also has TV tuner capability.

Commercial use of composite monitors

Often times, video studios will use stand-alone composite monitors since people there don't watch much TV. They can also be used when new AV devices are being tested. Stand-alone composite monitors are commonly used for video surveillance.

The monitors used in video surveillance often operate at the same frequencies as composite monitors but are not true composite monitors, as they use black and white graphics so the manufacture cost for the item will go down. Stand-alone composite monitors that are marketed as surveillance monitors are occasionally marketed for home use; Radio Shack is a notable retailer for that kind of scenario.

Common features

Examples of non-composites

Examples of NON-composite video include

See also

 


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