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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but
they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers -- Clive |
#2
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On Friday, 26 January 2018 14:08:25 UTC, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers There's always the UK, with a set top box. NT |
#3
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I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but
they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers Wouldn't they be OK for a bedroom TV with a satellite box or Freeview box/PVR? Either that, or dump them. Are you really going to ship them aboard? -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#4
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In article ,
Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? There is more than one standard for UHF in the world, I think. But very unlikely to be worth the shipping cost anyway. Have they got a line input? SCART, etc? If so they could be used with a FreeView box - lots used on Ebay for not a lot. -- *He who laughs last, thinks slowest. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#5
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No cos the UK had a unique soung/vision separation of 6Mhz most of the rest
of the world used 5.5 or 6.5 mhz and many used Secam not pal. However if they have a scart input you can still use them with the correct convvertors as monitors ignoring the tuners. Also if you can get hold of one, you can still use an old style video sender via analogue. I know this is true as there is a person down the road with one and I cen get it on an analogue set here, though he seems to mainly be watching Polish films. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! "Clive Arthur" wrote in message news ![]() I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers -- Clive |
#6
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Assuming it has a modulator and the set has a compatible socket, say scart
or audio and video sockets. Don't expect mega quality though. brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! wrote in message ... On Friday, 26 January 2018 14:08:25 UTC, Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers There's always the UK, with a set top box. NT |
#7
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On Friday, January 26, 2018 at 2:08:25 PM UTC, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers -- Clive They might just be of use for retro-gamers if it has composite in. There were many variants of PAL worldwide. System I as used in the UK was one on the rarer ones. The differences being in channel spacing and how the audio signal is broadcast. Your TV will probably support many of the others though. It's not really worth trying to take it abroad. Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Philip |
#8
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On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Plug in a suitable DTV box or stick like Amazon Fire / Google Chromecast etc and you can use them anywhere. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#9
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On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:19:10 UTC, wrote:
Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Yes, nobody wants pictures without conversion delays, compression artifacts and DOGs these days. Analogue TV really was awful. Owain |
#10
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wrote in message
... On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:19:10 UTC, wrote: Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Yes, nobody wants pictures without conversion delays, compression artifacts and DOGs these days. Analogue TV really was awful. At its best, analogue TV was pretty good. But it was rarely seen at its best. Both analogue and digital have their drawbacks. For digital, conversion delays, compression artefacts and DOGs. For analogue, PAL artefacts such as flickering coloured fringes around contrasty edges, the need to avoid fine detail which causes cross-colour, snowy/ghosted pictures if reception is poor. I'm sure if we could see studio-quality PAL and studio-quality digital, before transmission, and compared them with what the viewer sees at home, we'd weep at the loss of quality along the way. |
#11
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On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here.Â* Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Cheers I have an old analogue CRT set in my bedroom, I watch TV on it from a freesat/sky box connected via the scart. -- Best Wishes Simon (Dark Angel) http://www.realmofhorror.co.uk --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
#12
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On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here.Â* Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? OK, thanks all, it's the bin then. These are Casio ~2" screen things with no I/O. I did wonder if our analog stuff had perhaps ended up in some third world place and that there might have been a charity who'd have them. Cheers -- Clive |
#13
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In article ,
NY wrote: I'm sure if we could see studio-quality PAL and studio-quality digital, before transmission, and compared them with what the viewer sees at home, we'd weep at the loss of quality along the way. Yup. Real problem with digital is it's all do easy to turn down the data rate - to allow for a super improved service to be launched shortly. -- *Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#14
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On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote:
I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here.* Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? OK, thanks all, it's the bin then. These are Casio ~2" screen things with no I/O. I did wonder if our analog stuff had perhaps ended up in some third world place and that there might have been a charity who'd have them. Cheers One recently changed hands on a Web forum for £0.00 https://www.vintage-radio.net/forum/....php?p=1011459 -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
#15
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Clive Arthur wrote:
OK, thanks all, it's the bin then. These are Casio ~2" screen things with no I/O. I did wonder if our analog stuff had perhaps ended up in some third world place and that there might have been a charity who'd have them. Depending on what they are, some can be quite collectable: http://www.guenthoer.de/index-e.htm Many pocket TVs, even early Sinclair ones, were multistandard. You might not get SECAM or NTSC, but they should work for many places that do PAL. Obviously you'd have to look up what your specific model can do. There's lots of countries still with analogue TV: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digita...ion_transition Theo |
#16
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On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:49:38 UTC, wrote:
On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:19:10 UTC, wrote: Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Yes, nobody wants pictures without conversion delays, compression artifacts and DOGs these days. Analogue TV really was awful. Owain It was, it only allowed 5 channels. NT |
#17
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On 26/01/2018 15:05, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? There is more than one standard for UHF in the world, I think. Typically the manufacturers want to save costs, so they use a universal chipset that can receive them all - not to mention, often NTSC, etc. SteveW |
#18
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On Fri, 26 Jan 2018 17:06:19 -0000, NY wrote:
I'm sure if we could see studio-quality PAL and studio-quality digital, before transmission, and compared them with what the viewer sees at home, we'd weep at the loss of quality along the way. PAL was PAL, a good signal, receiver and tube could produce a high quality and watchable picture in the home, within the limits of PAL and SD. SD DTTV produces, at best, pictures that are barely watchable then it just gets worse. With very little (tending to zero) that you can do in the way of improving picture quality by improving signal, reciever or display. Digits at orgination, even in SD(*1), are very good and way superior to PAL. Pity they get so badly mangled by the time they arrive in the home via DTTV(*2). (*1) Pretty much everything is orginated in HD or 4k these days. (*2) DSAT is much better but still shows some artifacts over orgination. -- Cheers Dave. |
#19
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"Dave Liquorice" wrote in message
idual.net... On Fri, 26 Jan 2018 17:06:19 -0000, NY wrote: I'm sure if we could see studio-quality PAL and studio-quality digital, before transmission, and compared them with what the viewer sees at home, we'd weep at the loss of quality along the way. PAL was PAL, a good signal, receiver and tube could produce a high quality and watchable picture in the home, within the limits of PAL and SD. SD DTTV produces, at best, pictures that are barely watchable then it just gets worse. With very little (tending to zero) that you can do in the way of improving picture quality by improving signal, reciever or display. I find that I am much more aware of PAL artefacts (shimmering coloured edges on captions or other areas of high contrast) than I am of digital artefacts. Yes, if you analyse a still frame of some movement with DVB-T, there's blockiness and compression artefacts which you would not tolerate in a still photograph, but I don't *usually* notice it in a moving sequence. |
#20
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In article ,
NY wrote: I find that I am much more aware of PAL artefacts (shimmering coloured edges on captions or other areas of high contrast) than I am of digital artefacts. Yes, if you analyse a still frame of some movement with DVB-T, there's blockiness and compression artefacts which you would not tolerate in a still photograph, but I don't *usually* notice it in a moving sequence. Main thing I object to is jerking on movement. -- *Never kick a cow pat on a hot day * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#21
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On Sat, 27 Jan 2018 00:23:36 +0000 (GMT), Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I find that I am much more aware of PAL artefacts (shimmering coloured edges on captions or other areas of high contrast) than I am of digital artefacts. PAL just looks soft to me. Yes, if you analyse a still frame of some movement with DVB-T, there's blockiness and compression artefacts which you would not tolerate in a still photograph, but I don't *usually* notice it in a moving sequence. Evryones pereception is different, I find the, changing artifacts that surround a static caption on a static background terrible. Then you have the loss of detail in panning shots and the snap back to detail when the pan stops. Or when the compression gets silly, the talking static head when the only bits moving are the lips and eyes (when the person blinks or adjusts their gaze). Main thing I object to is jerking on movement. Yep, rollers that don't smoothly roll and lose detail so you can't read 'em. -- Cheers Dave. |
#22
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On Fri, 26 Jan 2018 15:20:41 +0000, John Rumm
wrote: On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Plug in a suitable DTV box or stick like Amazon Fire / Google Chromecast etc and you can use them anywhere. Fire and Chromecast require an HDMI port, anything 'analogue' would surely come with scart or a composite input at best. -- |
#23
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On 29/01/2018 08:08, The Other Mike wrote:
On Fri, 26 Jan 2018 15:20:41 +0000, John Rumm wrote: On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here. Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? Plug in a suitable DTV box or stick like Amazon Fire / Google Chromecast etc and you can use them anywhere. Fire and Chromecast require an HDMI port, anything 'analogue' would surely come with scart or a composite input at best. Depends on the vintage of the set. There were plenty of "HD ready" sets with analogue tuners. However reading the OP's second post, it seems he means they were pocket TVs and not just "portable". So chances of them having HDMI seem remote. -- Cheers, John. /================================================== ===============\ | Internode Ltd - http://www.internode.co.uk | |-----------------------------------------------------------------| | John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk | \================================================= ================/ |
#24
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On 26/01/2018 17:24, Clive Arthur wrote:
On 26/01/2018 14:08, Clive Arthur wrote: I have a couple of old portable LCD TVs from a relative's estate, but they're UHF analog PAL UK etc so no use here.Â* Is there anywhere in the world where they'd still work? OK, thanks all, it's the bin then.Â* These are Casio ~2" screen things with no I/O.Â* I did wonder if our analog stuff had perhaps ended up in some third world place and that there might have been a charity who'd have them. Cheers They fetch £2-3 plus postage on eBay so hardly worth the effort. eBay is always a good guide to what is in demand, you do get surprises sometimes with old technology. e.g. VCRs at the moment cant get enough of them to sell in my local charity shop. |
#26
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"tony sayer" wrote in message
... In article , scribeth thus On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:49:38 UTC, wrote: On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:19:10 UTC, wrote: Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Yes, nobody wants pictures without conversion delays, compression artifacts and DOGs these days. Analogue TV really was awful. Owain It was, it only allowed 5 channels. NT Yes was that so bad seeing the 50 or more dross dig it all channels ![]() Most of the additional channels that satellite or terrestrial give you are dross. But there are a few (BBC Four, Yesterday, Drama, ITV3, Talking Pictures) which I would miss if I didn't have them. But as for makeover, reality TV or shopping channels - utter bilgewater and a great waste of bandwidth! |
#27
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On Saturday, 3 February 2018 21:01:51 UTC, NY wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message ... In article , tabbypurr scribeth thus On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:49:38 UTC, wrote: On Friday, 26 January 2018 15:19:10 UTC, wrote: Analog TV is being consigned to its rightful place, the history books. Yes, nobody wants pictures without conversion delays, compression artifacts and DOGs these days. Analogue TV really was awful. Owain It was, it only allowed 5 channels. Yes was that so bad seeing the 50 or more dross dig it all channels ![]() Most of the additional channels that satellite or terrestrial give you are dross. But there are a few (BBC Four, Yesterday, Drama, ITV3, Talking Pictures) which I would miss if I didn't have them. But as for makeover, reality TV or shopping channels - utter bilgewater and a great waste of bandwidth! I thought they were all dross. |
#28
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tabb wrote:
It was, it only allowed 5 channels. No it didn't. With 8MHz per channel and an empty channel between each used channel it allowed 24 channels. Where I lived I could easily pick up about 12 channels. |
#29
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On Sunday, 4 February 2018 04:35:43 UTC, wrote:
tabb wrote: It was, it only allowed 5 channels. No it didn't. With 8MHz per channel and an empty channel between each used channel it allowed 24 channels. Where I lived I could easily pick up about 12 channels. that doesn't mean one could receive 24 channels of programming with differing content. That's what I was referring to. The system creaked a bit when they added the 5th. NT |
#30
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On 26/01/2018 15:17, Brian Gaff wrote:
No cos the UK had a unique soung/vision separation of 6Mhz most of the rest of the world used 5.5 or 6.5 mhz and many used Secam not pal. However if they have a scart input you can still use them with the correct convvertors as monitors ignoring the tuners. Also if you can get hold of one, you can still use an old style video sender via analogue. I know this is true as there is a person down the road with one and I cen get it on an analogue set here, though he seems to mainly be watching Polish films. Brian I seem to remember this question being asked by people emigrating to NZ, which uses PAL, but a UK TV would not have any sound without modification. |
#32
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