Hello,
I own the toshiba HD-A3 and have it set to 16:9. My TV is a Samsung 46
inch DLP HDTV.
Not if it happens on all, but on some Standard Dvd's when I play them there
are Black Vertical Bars on both sides of the screen even though it set to
16:9. For some reason Zoom only works in Tv mode on my Tv, not over HDMI.
Anyway I did find a way to solve the Problem, but it makes no sense to
me. I have to stop them movie go into HD DVD Player Settings., and change
it from 16:9 to 4:3.
Then when I play the Standard movie there are no Vertical Black Bars on the
TV...
As a Layman can anyone explain this to me. Thanks..
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Originally Posted by oldandinthe way
on my Toshiba HD-A3 set to up to 720p. So I guess they should match.
It had the Vertical Black Bars on both sides on the Last 3 SD Movies I watched,
until I changed the settings in the Toshiba HD-A3 to 4:3 instead of 16:9.
Then the problem is solved no Vertical Black Bars.
Of course I watch HDDVD Movies with the player set to 16:9.
Is there a solution or should I just change the settings every time I switch
I between Hd DVD and SD DVD??
Thanks for the help.. -
Many HDTVs have a setting in their setup menu to upscale SD input to HD in your case 720p.
Your Toshiba will also try to upscale SD.
If both are trying to upscale there can be inferior results. Is your TV trying to upscale?
Among the things some people see when their TV is set to upscale is standard SD broadcast modified to fill the screen, but the black bars on the sides of HD broadcasts which are 4:3 images.
If you set the Toshiba to 4:3 the TV can upscale. If you set it to 16:9 the image is already HD (probably with borders) and the TV does not upscale.
The only time I find a justification for upscaling is in letterboxed input. Why would you want to distort a 4:3 image to fit 16:9? -
Originally Posted by jagabo
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Question to ofield1
Why do you want to make people look fat?
Normal way to display 4:3 aspect ratio on a 16:9 display
Horizontal Big Meal. Why do this to Ingrid?
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Originally Posted by edDV
No need to be such a Jerk on the matter I just believe when you buy a expensive HDTV
you should not have to deal with Vertical Black Bars. I do not mind The Horizontal Ones.
My OPPO Upconverter never had or did this problem on any SD Movie. So explain that MR.
Know IT All ????? -
The Vertical Bars is the correct way to watch 4:3 material to a 16:9 screen.
The reason you don't mind watching 16:9 on 4:3 screen, is because you are used to it. Well, time changed, now it is the opposite. Deal with it.
There are 2 ways to fill a 16:9 screen with a 4:3 source: Zooming and panning. Both are wrong: you loose part of the picture using Zooming or you distort it when panning. Toshiba choose not to allow this stupid alternative. A wise choice.
Regarding your Oppo upconverter, you probably never set it up correct so to show the picture correct on your TV. Toshiba don't allow those things: You can do the things only correct. -
edDV - Nice try, but I learned a long time ago that people like ofield1 who want to see everything in 16:9 can't be reasoned with, ever. I don't understand it, but some people have a pathological hatred of pillar boxing and there is nothing any of us can do to talk them out of it.
ofield1 - I already told you that you have to "fix" this on your TV. I suggest you pay attention to that. SatStorm has told you the same thing. Your DVD player is not allowing you to do the wrong thing, so if you insist on doing the wrong thing, you have to mess with your TV setting ON THE TV ITSELF to "fix" this "problem". -
Originally Posted by ofield1
TV Display = Wide/SQZ (Will "pillarbox" 4:3 material with a slight penalty in 4:3 resolution) -
Originally Posted by ofield1
Personally, i prefer to see the correct aspect ratio of the video regardless of the tv i'm watching it on & not a distorted view.
It's not a problem, it's just doing it's job correctly and displaying the correct aspect ratio of the 4:3 video.
One cure, don't buy fullscreen movies and stop watching broadcast tv, because the majority of tv shows are full screen, although a lot of them are and have been converting over 8) -
ofield1,
You can do it Cinema style, install curtains in front of the screen so you can draw them for 4:3 presentations. You could even motorize the curtains to follow the aspect flag as they do in theaters.
Recommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
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LOL! Maybe the HDTV manufactures should use pictures of curtains rather than black bars!
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Now there is an idea for my HD DVR maker to implement let it animate curtains moving in and out for 4:3 and 16:9.
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