| Electronic M |
03-06-2020 10:19 AM |
There are devices that take HDMI and convert directly to analog RF ch3 or 4...If your only video sources are HDMI that will work fine and be less complicated, but it isn't necessarily best if you also have older analog video sources.
If you have say a cable box with only HDMI and a say a Laserdisc player with only composite video out what I would do is plug the HDMI from the cable box into the HDMI to composite converter box then take the output from that and the box and plug it into input 1 of a composite Audio/video switihand plug the LaserDisc player into input 2 of the switch then take the composite AV output of the switch and connect it to an RF modulator and then feed the RF from the modulator to your TVs.
If you are only running wired RF one of your analog devices is a VCR, and you know your VCR well you can use the VCRs own internal RF modulator and video switch to reduce the number of boxes... every VCR that can play a tape via RF (99% of VCRs) can take a composite Audio/Video input and modulate it to RF...to do it first play a tape and hit stop that will activate the modulator, then switch the modulators input to the internal tuner of the VCR, then you have to select the VCRs composite A/V input. On 90s and newer decks AV input is typically accessed by tuning below CH2 or above the highest channel (some VCRs have 2-3 AV inputs on adjacent 'channels'), but many 80s decks has a slide switch on the front...when the RF modulator on your VCR is on (there will be a light that says "VCR" indicating that) and you have the VCR 'tuned' to it's AV input it will act exactly the same as a stand alone RF modulator...
If you think this is complicated you should see my main home video rack: CED/selectavision, LaserDisc, DVD/HD-DVD, Blu-ray, Umatic, SuperBetamax, 2 S-VHS decks, a DVDrecorder/VHS, a DVDrecorder/DVR, 2 cable boxes, a DTV converter, and a PC with an older graphics card that does composite video... everything that can record can record from anything else(via composite or S-video), and every device is able to be transmitted to any TV on my property via 3 BT agile modulators (granted some lesser used devices can't be watched while some high use devices are playing or recording something else)....there is enough wire in that rack to lift a freight car. :D
My secondary rack is a similar rogues gallery of classic videogame consoles.
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