| November 2003. In Part Six, I
described upgrading my system with a Denon DVD-9000 player,
which caused a domino effect that forced me to rework my
theaterās video path and processing. Since I had both a
progressive DVD player and an HDTV set top box, I wanted
to switch high bandwidth component video and send the switched
signal to my existing Extron transcoder. (A transcoder is required to produce the
flavor of video required by my NEC CRT front projector.)
My B&K digital audio decoder/preamp has component video
switching, but according to its product manual the frequency
response of the B&K switch is only 10 MHz. That may
be more than enough for DVD but is woefully inadequate for
HDTV. (Months later, I would discover that the manual was
incomplete and B&Kās internal component video switch
does indeed support HDTV.) I couldnāt find a reasonably
priced, high bandwidth, 2-channel component video switcher,
so the only choice that seemed viable at the time was adding
an inexpensive transcoder and switching the two transcoderās
RGB signals through my existing Extron SW2ARHVxi RGB-HV
switch. I acquired a Key
Digital Systems KD-CTCA2, but as I described
to you eight months ago, it had several technical problems
that made it impractical to insert it into my video chain.
When I was working with the KD-CTCA2,
I contacted Key Digital Systemsā Mike Tsinberg to try to
resolve the problems I discovered. He was very helpful and guided me to one or
two workarounds. Unfortunately,
some problems could not be resolved. Among them was the need to modify the color temperature
of my projector to compensate for the color channel imbalance
of the KD-CTCA2. This made converting DVD component video with one transcoder, converting
the HDTV set top boxās component video with another, and
switching between the two sets of RGB signals unacceptable. The reason is that for DTV in 480p (as Fox is currently transmitting),
my projector would automatically switch to the same display
memory as for DVD; the color temperatures of DTV and DVD
would then appear to be quite different. I spent months exclusively using the Extron transcoder
and moving cables every time I wanted to change video sources;
this was inconvenient at best, downright annoying at worst.
A Redesigned Transcoder
Mike Tsinberg was quite gracious about the flaws I discovered
and he set to work to fix them in his next generation of
transcoder, which is now available. I recently acquired
Key Digitalās new KD-CTCA3 transcoder and Iām delighted
to report that every problem I found in the KD-CTCA2 has
been corrected. Even the packaging has been improved; the
new transcoder is almost as tiny as the last version but
is now in a more sturdy case. I began my evaluation by putting
the transcoder on the bench and here is what I found:
| |
KD-CTCA2 |
KD-CTCA3 |
Extron CVC200 |
| Red Output, 100 IRE |
770 mv |
111% |
630 mv |
97% |
670 mv |
97% |
| Green Output, 100 IRE |
710 mv |
100% |
650 mv |
100% |
690 mv |
100% |
| Blue Output, 100 IRE |
720 mv |
103% |
660 mv |
102% |
680 mv |
99% |
| Red Offset |
960 mv |
|
10 mv |
|
3 mv |
|
| Green Offset |
165 mv |
|
10 mv |
|
5 mv |
|
| Blue Offset |
840 mv |
|
10 mv |
|
2 mv |
|
| Passes Bi-level Sync |
Yes |
|
No* |
|
No |
|
| Passes Tri-level Sync |
Yes |
|
No* |
|
No |
|
*At the transcoderās RGB outputs (each color channel
was a little different), I observed a narrow, -240 mv pulse
approximately 0.4 usec wide that immediately preceded the
input component videoās sync pulse. It may be crosstalk
from the sync suppression circuitry, but these negative
pulses had no visible effect on the video as I compared
the appearance of the Extron with the new Key Digital.
Now, both the Extronās and the new Key Digitalās color channels
are within +/- 3%, providing very fine color accuracy. The Key Digitalās offsets have been reduced
to essentially zero, sync signals have been suppressed almost
completely, and amplitudes have been reduced to more compatible
levels.
The new Key Digital transcoder eliminates
all but two DIP (dual inline package) switches; it was designed
to operate in an automatic mode, sensing the scan rates
of incoming video. The only user control choices are: RGB-HV output mode (factory default)
or RGsB (sync on green) output mode; and, HV drive (factory
default) or composite sync on the H output. The factory defaults are precisely what my RGB-HV
projector requires, which made installation a snap. Since the KD-CTCA3 measured well on the bench, I
was not surprised to find that the transcoder looked great
in my theater.
I auditioned 480p DVD, 720p HDTV, and 1080i HDTV. The KD-CTCA3 performed flawlessly. Gone was the hazy onscreen interference of
the positive half-cycle of HDTVās tri-level sync pulses passed by the previous
model. Gone was
the exaggeration of reds. Gone was the brightness shift caused by the sync
pulses superimposed on the color channels. And gone was the incompatibility with my Extron
RGB-HV switch caused by the older unitās excessive offsets
and amplitudes. I
played one of my current reference DVDs, the Superbit release
of Starship Troopers. I watched the PBS demo loop (1080i), lovingly
shot to highlight the resolving power and color accuracy
of HDTV. I checked out a football game on CBS-DT (1080i)
and NYPD Blue on ABC-DT (720p). Since the Key Digitalās bandwidth of 110 MHz is twice
that of the Extron, I was not surprised that 1080iās spatial
resolution superiority over 720pās was readily apparent. For DVD, I found that the KD-CTCA3, like its predecessor,
is unaffected by Macrovision, a vulnerability in the Extron
CVC200 that has since been corrected. The Key Digital consistently produced wonderful
images that were indistinguishable from the Extron. This is high praise indeed, for the Extron
is a professional grade transcoder with a list price of
$895; the Key Digital is priced at only $349.
Iād have been quite satisfied enough with the transcoderās
video performance and its ability to deliver transparent
video conversion, but the KD-CTCA3 offers two additional
helpful features. First, it has a second input that accepts RGB-HV. In the presence of component video, the transcoder
converts that component video to RGB-HV. With no component video present, whatever signals are present at
the transcoderās RGB-HV input are passed automatically to
its RGB-HV output. This is terribly handy for anyone who wants
to connect either a home theater PC or an HDTV set top box
that offers the option of an RGB-HV output to a home theater
system. Very nice. The transcoderās
second additional feature is for those who may need access
to the component video being converted; the KD-CTCA3 offers
a second output, buffered component video.
Adding Source Switching.
But what if your HDTV set top box only offers a component
video output and your digital audio decoderās component
video switch has limited bandwidth (as I thought my B&K
had). Key Digital Systems has a very nice solution for that problem as
well, the KD-SW2X1 2-Channel Component Auto Switcher. Each of the switcherās channels has 75-ohm
RCA coaxial inputs for component video, analog stereo, and
a digital audio bit stream, so the switcher allows total
source signal switching capability. The switcher supports 480p, 720p, and 1080i,
passing both bi-level and tri-level sync. The switcherās -3 dB bandwidth is 110 MHz and itās
designed with a linear phase passband. Linear phase filters are the most benign possible
in the time domain; to translate into English, linear phase
filters do not ring, so they do not contribute to
visible haloing. The
KD-SW2X1 an auto-switcher. It defaults to passing signals from channel A; in
the presence of video signals on channel B, those signals
are passed to the outputs. A manual front panel control allows you to override
auto-switching.
I temporarily wired the Key Digital Switcher into my system
in a configuration that allowed me to compare, in real time,
identical video with and without the KD-SW2X1 in the signal
path. The Key Digital was transparent for 480p, 720p,
and 1080i. I could
still easily detect the improved resolution of 1080i over
720p. I could not detect a difference in the images with and without the
switcher in the path. Total
transparency; this is precisely what you want in such a
device.
With the addition of a second transcoder with two inputs
and a two-channel switcher, I now have much greater flexibility
to either add three more source components or connect a
variety of new hardware for A/B comparisons. These two external
components make it possible for my system to accommodate
up to five sources, for example:

Or I could have just as easily substituted
an HD-ready video game system, like the Microsoft Xbox,
for the D-Theater D-VHS machine. The great thing about this arrangement is that both
component video sources and RGB sources can be connected
directly to my system. Thatās flexibility.
Conclusion
The redesigned Key Digital Transcoder is a wonderfully economical
means of transforming component video to the RGB signals
that the overwhelming majority of front projectors require. It is transparent in use, trivial to install, and does not affect
the quality of the images. I couldnāt wholeheartedly recommend last yearās KD-CTCA2,
but the new KD-CTCA3 deserves your most serious consideration. Similarly, the KD-SW2X1 2-Channel Auto Switcher is
an economical means of transparently switching between two
high quality audio/video sources. If you want to add additional sources to your
system, or if your digital decoder preamp or receiver doesnāt
support HDTV signals, it too deserves your consideration.
(If you have any questions or comments for the author,
say hello to Dan here.)
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