It is also ideal for PS2, PS3, Xbox 360 and Wii video game consoles for foreign formats. I'm pretty sure most PAL tvs made after 1990 support this feature.This PAL / NTSC bidirectional converter can receive either PAL or NTSC input and convert it to another so users can watch PAL video on NTSC television or capture NTSC video game to PAL DVD recorder, and vice versa, for worldwide television or video recording.
It's also quite likely that your TV does actually support NTSC, you just need to change an option in the menu or press a button on your remote. There are chips available which decode NTSC into YUV/RGB and chips that encode RGB/YUV into PAL, you should be able to hook them up back to back.īut it's probably smarter to stop at the convert to YUV step and feed that directly into your TV (or convert to RGB, whatever input your TV supports). Such a conversion can be done in real-time without a framebuffer. There are NTSC to PAL-M converters which were popular in Brazil, but PAL-M shares the colour burst frequency with NTSC, so I suspect it's still not compatible with your TV (If the TV was find accepting a 3.58MHz colorbust you would be seeing corrupted color rather than black and white)Ĭonversion to "PAL 60" basically entails stripping out all of the color burst/signal/ out of the luma channel and re-encoding a PAL compatible colorbust/color signal back onto the Luma signal.
Vaping: Construction, mods and powering: /r/modifiedvapes/ and /r/OpenPV/Įasy, no. For general setup questions, 'how tos', specifications and what-connects-to-what etc., please use /r/solar.
Solar Ask here if designing or repairing your own electronic control circuits. Household electrical wiring, connectors and fittings: /r/electricians and /r/led (for room lighting). Home audio repairs especially for vintage gear: /r/audiorepair : /r/CarAV, /r/CarModification, /r/Cartalk, /r/AutoElectrical/Ĭomputers: /r/TechSupport. Hifi hookup and buying advice: /r/BudgetAudiophile/Ĭar/Vehicle: Lighting, audio, wiring, fixing etc. General electrical eng.: /r/AskEngineers, /r/ElectricalEngineering/ Starting Electronics: /r/StartingElectronicsĪrduino, Raspberry Pi and Embedded: /r/Arduino, /r/raspberry_pi or /r/RASPBERRY_PI_PROJECTS, /r/embedded, /r/esp8266, r/esp32īroader ECE (Electrical and Computer Eng.): /r/eceĬommercial (buying, selling, consulting jobs): /r/ElectronicsList Radio, rf, antenna design/theory questions and software-defined radio: /r/rfelectronics, /r/AmateurRadio, /r/GNURadio, /r/RTLSDR Some other subreddits focus on specific electronics/electrical-related topics and may be a better first place for your question:Įlectronics Design - specialist subredditsĪudio construction: /r/diysound (active moderation) and/or /r/diyaudio (no moderation)Įlectronic musical instruments design and repair: /r/SynthDIY, r/MusicElectronics/, /r/diypedals/ Many common questions are answered in the FAQ so do check it out: - Click HERE for our FAQ/Wiki - Related subreddits
"How can I take high voltage measurements with my oscilloscope?" "How do I calculate the bandwidth of an amplifier?" "Why doesn't my Op-Amp circuit work as expected?" "Trying to locate a replacement for a blown MOSFET" "Jokey" comments that don't materially contribute to the topic may be deleted. Read the sidebar and our Wiki/FAQ BEFORE posting! The post title should summarize the question clearly & concisely.Įxtra rules apply to questions on vehicle electronics - please read before posting.
Please READ THIS too - especially before posting that parts 'look OK'. TV Repair / replacing electrolytic capacitors Off topic questions, and those fully answered in the Wiki, may be removed. Not sure if your question is on topic? Ask the mods before posting. advice for 'electronic' goods (audio, TV, computers, phones, battery chargers, domestic appliances etc.) - use: /r/appliancerepair, /r/electrical, /r/electricians, /r/askanelectrician, /r/techsupport etc.Ĭareer or certification advice - please post in /r/ece LEDs), appliance repairs & advice.īuying and general tech.
A subreddit for practical electronic engineering questions: Circuit and electronic component theory, component-level circuit design & repair, buying components, test gear and tools.Ĭommercial stuff (selling, paid work etc.) - see /r/ElectronicsList/ - Click HERE for our FAQ/Wiki -Įlectrical installation work and parts, home lighting (inc.