VisionTek - RADEON X1550 Graphics Card
Model: VTK X1550PCI256 SKU: 8301269
256MB DDR2 memory; PCI interface; DVI, VGA, S-video and composite video TV-out
this is different from a geforce..|||yes it will work. However how much memory is going to affect how fast or slow your game will run.|||your memory is really bad, especially if ur using windows vista. vista alone needs 512 mb of ram to run efficiently let alone the game.|||Forget the previous responses.
The memory on your GPU is perfectly fine.
Basically, your computer will be able to run BF2 at low-medium settings depending on resolution and options selected. BF2142 should be kept at a very low medium.
How much memory do you have on your computer? To run BF2 on windows, EA recommends 1 gig. Although 1.5 is becoming the norm for BF2142.
I have two.
composite videocard
Thursday, April 26, 2012
How do I setup composite (not s-video) tv-out for old Satellite 1800 laptop?
I have a tv-out rca video port for Trident Cyberblade-Ai1 AGP video accelerator card connected to rca composite video (yellow) input on tv. I have WinXP & tried various options in the ctrl panel display settings & in the trident s/w settings. When connected to av input on vcr I get no response on the tv. When connected direct to av input on tv I get flickers when I apply display settings changes.
The MS help said I should add 2nd display adptr in device manager - Really? Should I?
Is it a frequency issue? I'm lost......*sigh*|||You need a video card, which, if your laptop doesn't have one, is extremely hard to put on manually.|||The windows device manager as really limited function sometimes there is extra add by the video card drivers. But the windows device manager should do the job.
On the desktop right click then go properties -> Settings (tab) -> click on the second monitor in the select drop down choose the correct output and set the correct resolution settings.
Hope it helps
The MS help said I should add 2nd display adptr in device manager - Really? Should I?
Is it a frequency issue? I'm lost......*sigh*|||You need a video card, which, if your laptop doesn't have one, is extremely hard to put on manually.|||The windows device manager as really limited function sometimes there is extra add by the video card drivers. But the windows device manager should do the job.
On the desktop right click then go properties -> Settings (tab) -> click on the second monitor in the select drop down choose the correct output and set the correct resolution settings.
Hope it helps
S-video to composite on Nvidia GTX280?
Decided to drag my old Projection style big screen tv out of the garage and put it in my room. My PC is running a single Nvidia 280 GTX. I'm wanting to hook the tv up to my computer via an s-video to composite adapter. I already have 2 monitors hooked up to my DVI ports, and my card does have an s-video port on it. Anyone know if I'm going to have any problems getting my TV to work as a 3rd "monitor" or am I going to be wasting my time dragging my huge and HEAVY TV into my room? I've never tried a setup like this, so I figured I'd ask first before I do any heavy lifting lol. Please, only those that know for a fact as to whether this will/will not work reply, no speculation, por favor.
Thanks in advance.|||The GTX280's GPU is designed to support TWO displays only.
You will NOT be able to use your old TV as a third monitor on that GTX280.
Triple-monitor support did not arrive for consumer-grade single-GPU video cards until ATI released their Radeon HD5000-series late last year (and the third monitor is required to have a DisplayPort jack).|||s-video is using a different type of signal compared to composite.. 99.9% sure its not working unless the adapter is converting the signal..
the signal will only be a copy of on of the monitors, so i would rather se if u can hook it up to one of the dvi ports (depending on inputs on the tv u might need a dvi-hdmi/vga adapter)...|||Dont think you can use all 3 outputs at the same time my friend. SVGA will give a rubbish picture anyway for a large screen, you need to use one of the DVI's
Thanks in advance.|||The GTX280's GPU is designed to support TWO displays only.
You will NOT be able to use your old TV as a third monitor on that GTX280.
Triple-monitor support did not arrive for consumer-grade single-GPU video cards until ATI released their Radeon HD5000-series late last year (and the third monitor is required to have a DisplayPort jack).|||s-video is using a different type of signal compared to composite.. 99.9% sure its not working unless the adapter is converting the signal..
the signal will only be a copy of on of the monitors, so i would rather se if u can hook it up to one of the dvi ports (depending on inputs on the tv u might need a dvi-hdmi/vga adapter)...|||Dont think you can use all 3 outputs at the same time my friend. SVGA will give a rubbish picture anyway for a large screen, you need to use one of the DVI's
Does this Video Card support S-Video out?
I have this Inno3d Nvidia GeForce 7300 GT 256MB, here's the link to it
http://www.inno3d.com/products/graphic_c…
I tried using the "S-Video to Composite" cable, from the Video Card's S-Video to the TV's Composite, and no matter what I did, it won't work. So do you have any other suggestions?
If the above won't work, I planned to use "VGA to Composite/S-Video" cable since my video card has a VGA port. Now the question is, would that work? Does my video card support TV-out through its VGA?
Please and thank you, I've tried the net and found nothing so far. Thanks|||Did you choose Clone in your graphics card display options?
VGA to Composite/S-Video cables usually won't work unless the card/computer specifically allows it. More often than not it doesn't.|||yes but a lot of people are complaining that they have problems with it
http://www.inno3d.com/products/graphic_c…
I tried using the "S-Video to Composite" cable, from the Video Card's S-Video to the TV's Composite, and no matter what I did, it won't work. So do you have any other suggestions?
If the above won't work, I planned to use "VGA to Composite/S-Video" cable since my video card has a VGA port. Now the question is, would that work? Does my video card support TV-out through its VGA?
Please and thank you, I've tried the net and found nothing so far. Thanks|||Did you choose Clone in your graphics card display options?
VGA to Composite/S-Video cables usually won't work unless the card/computer specifically allows it. More often than not it doesn't.|||yes but a lot of people are complaining that they have problems with it
What is a good Video Card brand with an NVIDIA chipset?
I'm shopping around for desktop video cards. I just want a higher quality manufacturer (like Maxtor is to hard drives) and I would like it to have an NVIDIA-made chipset. Also a Composite-Video our S-Video out will be necessary. I don't want something over-priced or that lights up or anything fancy, I just want something that isn't going to have any kinds of problems.|||Try going with EVGA. I build computers for myself, friends and relatives, and I always use EVGA cards with nVidia chipsets. They are available at Circuit City. But it is much cheaper to buy them online at newegg.com. Try this link:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLis…
I have it narrowed down to EVGA cards with nVidia chipsets. I don't know what type of interface you need (AGP, PCIe, etc.) or what size of memory you want. You'll have to sort by the interface first, and then see which ones left have the video out that you want. Then pick the amount of memory you want from what's left of those.
Also see evga.com.
Hope this helps!|||I'd stick with nVidia.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductLis…
I have it narrowed down to EVGA cards with nVidia chipsets. I don't know what type of interface you need (AGP, PCIe, etc.) or what size of memory you want. You'll have to sort by the interface first, and then see which ones left have the video out that you want. Then pick the amount of memory you want from what's left of those.
Also see evga.com.
Hope this helps!|||I'd stick with nVidia.
Report Abuse
Computer (integrated graphics card) to TV (red, white, yellow composite) help?
I am looking for a way to output video and audio to my TV. My TV only has the three color composite in and coaxial in. My computer only has VGA monitor out and mini stereo out. It would be great if there was a cable that had VGA and mini stereo to three color AV composite. Also, if there is something that took the graphics card output and outputs coaxial. I have an integrated graphics card and I am trying to do this in the least amount of money possible. Thanks for any help.|||you could try look for those kinda cables in computer hardware shops
(the normal monitor plug to those 3 colour plug)
not sure whether it will work
but if it does, its a preety cheap solution
(the normal monitor plug to those 3 colour plug)
not sure whether it will work
but if it does, its a preety cheap solution
Fuzzy reception in my video card tv out?
I recently hooked my pc to my television with a s video out from my video card. I used a S-video to composite cable since my television does not have a s-video socket. its works but im getting a fuzzy picture in my television. can any one help?|||Unfortunately, that's S-video and composite for you. Those are low-resolution video signals from the days of old boob-tube TVs and that's all they are capable of. They deliver poor video quality and there is nothing you can do to improve it.
In the future, you might consider buying an LCD HDTV with HDMI ports. Those are capable of high-resolution and can be connected to any PC with either a DVI or HDMI port (yes, DVI is compatible with HDMI). And it looks light years better than S-video or composite.
In the future, you might consider buying an LCD HDTV with HDMI ports. Those are capable of high-resolution and can be connected to any PC with either a DVI or HDMI port (yes, DVI is compatible with HDMI). And it looks light years better than S-video or composite.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)