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Old 5th August 2003, 11:00   #13  |  Link
SeeMoreDigital
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Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Notts, UK
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Quote:
Originally posted by scharfis_brain
@SeeMoreDigital: Not, its NOT the Composite-Connection. Its the VHS, that is the reason for the bleeding chroma.
VHS strores LUMA with about 2,5MHz bandwidth, and the CHROMA is stored with about 0,6 MHz, so there are about
240 lines of LUMA you can store
and
60 lines of CHROMA. I hope, you'll see it now, why chroma is bleeding horizontally on VHS...
It would sound like you've never had the opportunity to try what I've suggested.

If not please humour me, by having a go at outputting a high red composite VHS tape source image and then capturing it to an S-VHS tape player/ouput - using one of the 'comp to S-VHS' adaptors I'm talking about.

It helps most times with VHS tape to S-VHS tape dubs. But not all the time with VHS tape to S-VHS capture card dubs!
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