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Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 12:29 am
by blackfrostbite
Hi there friend, sorry its been so long. Unfortunately i did`nt manage to solve to battery problem. So i went out and bought two different cdi`s. One a good old 210 model and the other a 470 model. Both are working perfectly but i have a little problem. I just bought a flat screen lcd 20"inch with built in dvd player, the make is Cello, but it will not pick up the neither of my cdi`s. I`ve tried the aeriel input, i`ve tried the scrat leads, i`ve even tried the cvbs connection, i`ve tried manually tuning and auto tuning and fine tuning, b ut it will just not pick up the cdi machines. Does anyone out there know why this is. Is it to do with the frequenncy that lcd t.v`s put out, because these machines work perfectly on my normal t.v`s. So i am completely confused. Please can anyone offer suggestion. I might have to consider selling my cdi machines plus over 50 games and films, one desperate man who needs his cdi working on his new lcd t.v, lol.

Posted: Tue Dec 19, 2006 5:29 pm
by rupert
im no professional but, if the TV is 100hz then you may have problems (usually it should tune to channel 36 anyway) also using the scart should have no tuning issues but make sure you put it in a scart port that supports RGB as they dont all (usually scart port 1 on your TV). this is only from my own experiance, i dont have much technical know how :?

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:08 pm
by Bas
blackfrostbite wrote: I`ve tried the aeriel input, i`ve tried the scrat leads, i`ve even tried the cvbs connection, i`ve tried manually tuning and auto tuning and fine tuning, b ut it will just not pick up the cdi machines.
Scart connections of LCD screens should easily pick up any signal, including cd-i... I'm not sure what you mean with aerial input, neither with cvbs... does it have the old standard RGB input plugs? You sure you found the right channel (perhaps you need to adjust manually)

Do other signal get through the scart lead, or is it just the CD-i player?

All the best, and welcome to you all who visit this place for the first time ;)

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:21 pm
by WindowsKiller
Neither the CD-i 210 nor the 470 has RF output, so there's no need to tune to a particular channel.

Just select the A/V channel. Depending on if you use SCART or the RCA jacks, you have to set up your TV to take the correct input signal. Note that SCART is not equal to RGB (SCART is just the name of the connector and can carry various video signals). I'm not sure if the CD-i 210 outputs RGB at all, so try with "composite video" first to be on the safe side.

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:26 pm
by Bas
Thanks, you just taught me something: what is RF exactly? It does not tune automatically to the right channel, but my Nintendo is on RGB inputs and it actually does. Maybe a TV wizardry thing?

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:34 pm
by WindowsKiller
RF is the connection that is also used for the aerial cable. Hard to describe in English, as you already said that you don't know what "aerial" is ("Antennenkabel" in German, but I guess that won't help ;)). It's the frequency modulation that the TV channels use.

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:41 pm
by Bas
ah, I remember the RF modulator you had for CD-i, antennekabel is also dutch so don't worry ;)

Google takes away the language barrier!

You remember the RF Modulator?

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:51 pm
by WindowsKiller
Bas wrote:You remember the RF Modulator?
Of course, it's advertised on the last page of almost every CD-i player's manual. :D

Posted: Sat Dec 23, 2006 8:56 pm
by Bas
just to avoid confusion, I splitted the posts guys.