[Coco] CoCo 2 to Composite

rietveld rietveld rietveldh at hotmail.com
Thu Aug 9 14:05:09 EDT 2018


Connected using a RCA to COAX adapter. 99 cents

Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
  Original Message
From: Salvador Garcia via Coco
Sent: Thursday, August 9, 2018 11:17 AM
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
Reply To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
Cc: Salvador Garcia
Subject: Re: [Coco] CoCo 2 to Composite


 This is an excellent idea!

One caveat: Make sure that the video capture device has an RF in. I bought a cheap one from Amazon and it works as expected, but only has composite and S-video in. In any case, if it does have RF in, most likely it will have an RF connector, so the RCA to RF adapter is still necessary.
Rietveld, can I ask how yours is connected? :-) Thanks.

Salvador




    On Thursday, August 9, 2018, 9:27:45 AM CDT, rietveld rietveld <rietveldh at hotmail.com> wrote:

 You guys missed a super easy solution that I am using right now

If you have a USB capture device on your PC just connect the RF out from the coco2  to the cable IN connector of the capture card/stick.  Now tune the software to channel 3/4.

The bonus is that you can record your computing as well as have it in a window while you surf YouTube for  coco videos



Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
  Original Message
From: Salvador Garcia via Coco
Sent: Thursday, August 9, 2018 10:08 AM
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
Reply To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
Cc: Salvador Garcia
Subject: Re: [Coco] CoCo 2 to Composite


 Hi John, I searched for "convert rf to composite" and git a few hits promoting devices like those mentioned by Ed (Zippster).

Also, when you say that you don't have a "traditional TV", does that mean that you don't have any TV at all? If you have one, even a modern one then you can connect the RF out from the computer directly to the RF in of the TV. The ubiquitous TV converter boxes that were prevalent in the 80s were impedance adapters. They matched up the 75 Ohm out of the computer with the 300 Ohm in of the TVs antenna terminals. The RF input of modern TVs is 75 Ohm, so the impedance adapter is not necessary. Just go to your electronics store and get an RCA to RF cable adapter, like this one:

https://www.alliedelec.com/bomar-interconnect-products-r0849/70000509/


Search around, you'll find them cheaper elsewhere. Major electronic stores might have them (think Best Buy, Microcenter, and possibly Target and (gasp) Walmart). This is the same solution proposed by Jack. This is the cheapest way to get the CoCo's screen on a display, but quality may vary from OK to barely tolerable. Good luck in your endeavor.

Salvador


    On Wednesday, August 8, 2018, 6:42:13 PM CDT, John Mautz <ejmautz2 at gmail.com> wrote:

 Ok CoCo fans, up until now I have only played with CoCo3's.  One of my
friends saw my facebook posts and gave me a CoCo 2 and an Atari 600XL both
only have RF out.  I have no traditional TV's to hook these up to see if
they work.  So, here is the question....

What fancy or basic adapters are you using to hook these RF only devices to
composite monitors?  I've done some looking on Amazon and it seems the
items thy have listed convert HDMI/Component to RF not the other way around
and they don't say if they are bi-directional or not.

Thanks for the help.
John.

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