-40%
Commodore monitor & TV cable with video and audio. New. 4 ft.
$ 10.03
- Description
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Description
New cable for connecting the Commodore 64 or Commodore 128 to a composite monitor or newer style televisions having a video and audio RCA type input jack. Approximately 4 ft long. Has 4 RCA plugs on one end and a 5-pin DIN male connector to go to the computer. Even though this cable has a 5-pin DIN male connector it will also work on later versions of the Commodore 64 and the 128 which have the 8-pin DIN video output as well as the earliest Commodore 64 computers which just had a 5-pin DIN video output. Supports split chroma and luma as well as regular composite signal. Therefore it can be used on Commodore brand monitors or non-Commodore monitors as well as on televisions with video and audio input jacks. Sticker on cable tells you which color-coded connector is for video, audio, chroma or luma.On Jun-05-09 at 03:27:35 PDT, seller added the following information:
Note: The earliest versions of the Commodore 64 (having a 5-pin DIN video output) had an inferior quality video circuit and video chip. This cable will give a better picture with these old units by using the video input of your television than will result from using the RF output from the computer (which goes to the antenna or cable input of a television) but usually won't result in as nice of picture as you will get if you use this same cable on a Commodore 64 which has the later style 8-pin video output-- mainly due to the fact that most of the Commodore 64 computers with the 8-pin video output had later (nicer) version video chips. Both versions of the Commodore 64 will get the nicest picture with this cable if used with a monitor which supports chroma and luma (seperated) video inputs such as most Commodore monitors from that era have.
Jim Butterfield (one of the greatest Commodore experts) wrote an excellent article called "How to Improve the TV Quality of the Commodore 64" which explains in great detail many of the dynamics involved in getting a nice picture from your Commodore 64 and 128. If you read and understand his article you will know why this cable is such a great choice. This article appeared in Compute! magazine issue 42 on November 1983 on page 191. You may want to use one of the internet search engines to locate this article (which can be found online still as of May 2015) and read more details about this matter.