Sorry, I don't know where to put this but I have a question.
Would the following setup be possible?
Video card -> DVD-I female output --> DVI-D male to HDMI female adapter --> HDMI male-to-male cable --> HDMI female input --> LCD Monitor.
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Yes, that should work most times as long as the DVI output includes a digital output, which DVI-I does. I have used a similar setup. You won't likely get audio with that setup, but you probably knew that.
I have DVI-I on the back of my LCD monitor, but have a HDMI cable, so I'm going from a DVI-I to HDMI adapter on the back of the computer>HDMI cable>HDMI to DVI-I adapter to the LCD monitor. Works fine.
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No noticeable improvement or decrease in quality. There really shouldn't be as both are just wires. The length of the run and the quality of cable and connectors would make a bigger difference. I have a 45' HDMI run to my projector and a the 20' DVI>HDMI>DVI run to my LCD monitor. I use some of the better quality cables from MonoPrice and I would recommend them for both the price and the quality.
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I have another question, since the the back of my comp has a DVI-I Dual Link female output, for the DVI-HDMI adapter, would it be better if the adapter's DVI male was I dual or D Dual?
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Depends on your source. Upscale doesn't add quality.
Do you have access to 4Kx2K source or higher?
PS: There is such a thing as dual link HDMI (29 pins vs 19) but nobody is using it. Are you saying you have a monitor with 29 pin HDMI (Type B) connectors?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMILast edited by edDV; 22nd Dec 2010 at 03:09.
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Most dual link computer monitors connect with dual link DVI-D not dual link HDMI. Such monitors exceed 1920x1080 resolution and are used for CAD or movie resolution 2D/3D graphics.
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I meant video source file format.
Some GeForce 6800 GT cards have dual link, others don't. What is your monitor?
http://www.pcauthority.com.au/Review/59696,nvidia-geforce-6800-gt.aspxRecommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
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There is no advantage connecting a 6800 GT to a VH242 using HDMI. Normal connection is DVI-D to DVI-D. HDMI v1.1 and DVI-D single link are electrically identical.
That monitor does not support dual link but if it did it would only be available on the DVI-D connection and the cable would need to connect the dual link pins. The HDMI v1.1 (19 pin) connector does not support dual link.
Dual link is only used to run monitor resolutions higher than 1920x1080p.
PS: Your monitor only supports HDMI v1.1 single link. The HDMI v1.3 and v1.4 single link standards allow resolutions higher than 1920x1080 without need for the dual link pins. They accomplish this with greater bit rates on existing pins.Last edited by edDV; 22nd Dec 2010 at 14:11.
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Despite the lack of advantage, out of curiosity, what happens if I tried to plug HDMI 1.3 male output to to the monitor's HDMI 1.1 female input?
OK. Allow me rephrase you:
How I would know which HDMI version an LCD monitor supports would be their maximum supported resolution. So for instance, if it's higher than 1920x1080, it would most likely support HDMI 1.3 or 1.4? Even then, a DVD-D Dual link connection is unnecessary.
Please correct me if I'm wrong. -
Sorry for going off tangent here, but is there a significant/noticable difference between expensive and similar cheap HDMI cables?
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You read the monitor spec sheet to determine HDMI version support and supported resolutions. These are usually in the manual.
Most computer monitors that support resolutions higher than 1920x1080 use DVI-D dual link. HDMI v1.3, v.1.4 are rarely supported by display cards or computer monitors. You must read the specs for supported modes (e.g. xvYCC, 3D).
Note that a monitor's HDMI version number does not mean all modes possible for that version are supported. You need to see spec for each feature.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HDMILast edited by edDV; 23rd Dec 2010 at 17:42.
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True v1.3x v1.4 cables need to be tested to spec. If you are going to use the advanced features, make sure the cable carries the proper HDMI certification. That doesn't mean non-certified cables won't work.
Read this.
http://www.bluejeanscable.com/articles/hdmi-spec-versions.htm?hdmideptRecommends: Kiva.org - Loans that change lives.
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