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This Video Stabilizer has a S-video input and output as well as Composite Video connections The main feature is the stabliser will restore the Video signal to its pure State, with no piggyback spikes or data inserted in to the video signal, thus making it for video amplifiers, data projectors,processors and VHS or DVD recorders to process.

This unit has the following features:
- Automatically recognies TV system of the video input.
- Regenerates sync. and restores colour burst of the Video input to achieve an error-free standard Video output.
- Ideal for use in video system, duplication of video tapes , DVDs to VHS or DVD recorders.
(Subject to copyright)
- Supports Composite or S-Video inputs & outputs
- Unit will NOT convert the Format so it can be recorded.(Some sellers are falsely Advertising this as a feature)
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The unit will convert NTSC to PAL or PAL to NTSC colour (Or Color if your an Americian) Signal, But it wont convert the Sync Signal, (it 50Hz for PAL or 60 Hz for NTSC.) as this is not changed it means you can NOT record a Different Video format to PAL or NTSC , but only View it on a TV or Monitor.
PS NTSC is often joked as being an Acronym for Never The Same Color, its just a Little techie Joke..
What is a Video Stabiliser?
It removes any Signals from your video or DVD signal that are not a pure
video as per the AUSTRALIAN STANDARDS, these little signals can
really upset MONITORS ,AV Amps, TV's and VCR's.
They are ideal for Home Video recordings.(Subject to Copyright).
I use one myself to get rid of the copy protection signal, because it causes my Sony A/V amplifier and Sony TV to go Light and Dark when viewing a DVD or Foxtel movie. Also When using my DVD recorder that has a HDD the copy protection signal will stop me from using Time shift feature,
this feature is used in the MyStar box, so why cannot I use it on my own Digital HDD recorder?
Not that Iam suggesting that you use Video Stabiliser to enable you to make copies of Movies.
What we are doing is presenting a way to make Copy protected movies to work with normal TV's, Data projectors,rear projection monitors & HDD time shift recorders.
NO,I do not use it for Copying and you should not either!
(FACT: Did you know that the word Marcrovision is a trademark of Macrovision Corporation, a Delaware corporation in the US of A? and it is what most DVD manufactures encode on to their Movies to prevent people from coping them.
All units come with the DC plugpack (240 Volt to 12 volt Ac adaptor) and AV lead
----- Original Message -----
From: "Cinemasia.net"
Newsgroups: aus.dvd
Sent: Sunday, April 25, 2004 10:26 AM
Subject: Re: macrovision versions?
> matrokr Wrote:
> there's places advertising 'macrovision removal' boxes online that promise
> to remove 'macrovision 1'... which suggests there may be macrovision v.2,
> 3, etc - is this so?
> because the software i've used to backup some dvds which removes macrovision
> sometimes fails altogether when dealing with some dvds; could this be the
> 'newer' macrovision coding, etc?
> tia,
> Macrovision Level 2 Colourstripe is the protection that is implemented
> by Macrovision on DVD s-video/composite/SCART output, and most
> 'macrovision removal' boxes do not remove it. There are some products
> that will work, namely the SIMA Colour Corrector, which is a colour
> tweaker. TBC-100 (Time Base Corrector)
> www.datavideo-tek.com
> A Time Base Corrector is the more expensive solution as it reproduces
> the video signal and cleans the image. It is intended to "correct" poor
> quality video sourced from VHS.
> --
> Cinemasia.net
> DVD Collector
This was posted in the AUS.DVD newsgroup and explains a bit about the other copy protection formats around.
Also another good source of information is the Australian Magazine, SiliconChip, have a read what Leo Simpson says about the Macrovision Sarga Macrovision on DVD's is not 'Merchantable Quality'
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