RGBSource wrote:viletim wrote:Voultar,
I did some more testing with coupling caps in series with RGB signals. All capacitively coupled video signals have frame tilt distortion and it's the job of the video clamp to compensate for this. They also have a very small amount of line tilt distortion. The visible distortion is line tilt + clamp error (from fixing frame tilt). I don't have good quality video monitors at hand, but I can believe this distortion can be visible when using coupling caps less than 220u in some circumstances. It's somewhat dependant on the clamp performance of the TV/Monitor/Scaler.
It could well very be that he's interjecting to deflect as his solution to the faulty regulators was to placate customers by removing caps in cables, instead of diagnosing and resolving the actual issue. Pretty bad if that's the case.
Are you really that dense, or do you have a serious social disorder?
Not once did I make the claim that the phenomenon was
the cause to problems that people are
currently experiencing. I explained in fairly clear terms that I've corrected visual distortion issues in the past by removing the stacked AC coupling capacitors. I never discredited Tim's explanation with recent/current batches of his product. I certainly never said it was
the solution. Where is it that I instruct people to remove capacitors from their cabling?
Dude, you really need to get over yourself. You treat so many people here with disrespect and you often contrive toxicity with your ridiculous posts and needless bashing.
@Viletim -Right on dude. I agree with you.