I bought one over the weekend. I'm very happy with the TV thus far, but part of my setup from before entailed a PC connection, which as it turns out - this particular model of Plasma is lacking in the 15-pin VGA input port.
So, being resourceful - I decided to go to CompUSA, pick up a video card that outputs DVI - and use a DVI to HDMI adapter cable, plug it into the TV's HDMI port, and all is good. Or is it?
I got to thumbing through the user manual of the TV, and came across a section where it states that "Use with a PC is not assumed". It didn't say that it is "not recommended", but it did fall under the 'Caution' and 'Care of this product' section in the manual.
I got it to work (prior to reading this), and the only problem is that I can't seem to get the output resolution of the PC to match the native resolution on the TV, (which is a 1080p set), without over-scan or under-scan. 1920x1080 doesn't work, which is confusing (plus makes everything too small to read from the couch anyway).
Just wanted to see if anyone had any input on this, if you would recommend or dissuade me from doing this...
I know from prior experience installing many a plasma TV in the commercial and television station environments that we ran computer based signals to Plasma TV's all the time, usually on pro and commercial line Panasonic Plasmas that had the option to swap out modules for other connectivity choices (VGA, DVI, RGBHV, etc.) Never thought anything from it - installed it according to the prints, calibrated the set, configured the data to be displayed (many of them with static borders left on continually - the Panny's were always chosen for this due to their resistivity to burn-in), and moved on to the next job.
This TV cost me a pretty penny (by my standards), so the last thing I need to do is hook anything up to it that will damage the display in some kind of way.
Help/Advice is appreciated on this...
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