Hi all, recently bought a VSC 500 to output my PC to a JVC D-Series and I'm wondering whether this unit is functioning correctly. The problem is blacks are a greyish green. At first I thought it might be my Displayport to VGA converter, but then I tried with no signal going into the VSC 500.
-With the VSC 500 set to output a black screen on no signal, blacks are grey.
-When a signal is passed to it, blacks are grey.
-However, with the VSC 500 set to output a Color Bar screen on no signal, the right-most black bar is actually black.
Last picture shows a PS2 outputting black, so I know it's not the JVC. Is this just a bad unit or am I missing something?
Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels SOLVED
Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels SOLVED
Last edited by HesterDW on Wed Nov 30, 2022 4:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels
try the NTSC pedestal setting in the menu.
Re: Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels
That was it! I would have never thought to try that setting. Even after reading the user guide I have no clue what it does lol. Thanks so much.
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Re: Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels SOLVED
What value did you end up setting it to?
Re: Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels SOLVED
it removes the DC offset which might be present on video signals. That usually depends on the original region of your equipment (like NTSC in Japan vs. NTSC in the US). This was a nuissance at best with analogue equipment, but becomes a nightmare when dealing with it on digital conversions, where it's easily confound with a range mismatch (black level in RGB vs. YCbCr).I would have never thought to try that setting. Even after reading the user guide I have no clue what it does lol. Thanks so much.
There isn't much you need to understand about it. Just set it in a way so you get proper blacks without adding black crush.
Re: Extron VSC 500 Defective? Raised Black Levels SOLVED
The only values are ON or OFF. It was on by default, as stated in the manual. I turned it off and that solved it!SavagePencil wrote:What value did you end up setting it to?
Ok I somewhat understand. The manual mentioned blanking level but that went over my head. Analog video truly is a different world. Figuring out how to get a signal from modern tech that these CRTs can understand has been a journey.Fudoh wrote:it removes the DC offset which might be present on video signals. That usually depends on the original region of your equipment (like NTSC in Japan vs. NTSC in the US). This was a nuissance at best with analogue equipment, but becomes a nightmare when dealing with it on digital conversions, where it's easily confound with a range mismatch (black level in RGB vs. YCbCr).I would have never thought to try that setting. Even after reading the user guide I have no clue what it does lol. Thanks so much.
There isn't much you need to understand about it. Just set it in a way so you get proper blacks without adding black crush.