iScan VP30

DVDO iScan VP30 FAQs

  1. What is the iScan VP30?
  2. What is the difference between the iScan VP30 and the iScan VP20 or iScan HD+?
  3. What video inputs does the iScan VP30 have?
  4. What signal does the iScan VP30 output?
  5. What audio formats can the iScan VP30 support?
  6. Tell me more about the HDMI connections on the iScan VP30
  7. What kind of aspect ratio control does the iScan VP30 offer?
  8. What video processing technology does the iScan VP30 use?
  9. How does the iScan VP30 handle different input signals and how can these signals be output from the iScan VP30?
  10. Tell me more about the lipsync correction on the iScan VP30
  11. Does the iScan VP30 have an On Screen Display (OSD)?
  12. Tell me more about the frame rate conversion feature on the iScan VP30
  13. How does the iScan VP30 detect incoming signals?
  14. What kind of power supply does the iScan VP30 come with?
  15. I have an A/V receiver to handle the switching of my A/V sources. How should I hook up the iScan VP30 in my set-up?
  16. Will the iScan VP30 improve the picture quality of standard definition channels from my satellite system (DSS)?
  17. What does the color of the power LED on my VP30 mean?
  18. What do the different frame rate options mean?

1. What is the iScan VP30?

The DVDO iScan VP30 is a high-definition video processor & hub that converts standard and high definition video content from your DVD player, VCR, PVR, satellite receiver, game console, or PC to any output resolution between VGA (640x480) and 1080p (1920x1080), including the popular HDTV resolutions such as 720p and 1080i.

The iScan VP30 brings 10-bit scaling to the DVDO iScan product family, while adding HDMI switching, professional BNC connections, robust Digital/Analog Audio switching, routing, and processing technology. For the sophisticated home theater, and audio/video presentation systems, the iScan VP30 makes the perfect centralized control and processing hub.

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2. What is the difference between the iScan VP30 and the iScan VP20 or iScan HD+?

The iScan VP30 offers the same innovative video processing technology as the VP20, while providing an expanded set of input and output choices and control functions.

The iScan VP30 offers the following additional features to the iScan HD+: 10-bit scaling, HDMI switching, analog HD component and analog RGBHV processing/ transcoding, and analog audio delay.

Please see the iScan Comparison table for a detailed list of differences.

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3. What video inputs does the iScan VP30 have?

The iScan VP30 has 2 Composite video inputs, 2 S-video (Y/C) inputs, 2 Component video (YPbPr) inputs, 1 RGBHV/Component video (BNCs) input, 4 HDMI inputs, and 1 optional SD-SDI input.

2 Composite video inputs

2 S-Video (Y/C) inputs

The composite and S-video inputs accept standard definition NTSC (480i) and PAL/SECAM (576i) signals. These standard definition signals are deinterlaced and scaled by the iScan VP30.

2 Component video (YPbPr) inputs

(The component inputs also have an additional sync connector to accept RGB/S signals, commonly found in Europe).

The component inputs accept YPbPr or RGB/S formats. 480i and 576i signals are deinterlaced and scaled, 480p, 576p, 720p, and 1080i inputs can be scaled. Any signal that is processed can be output from the iScan VP30 as either an analog (component or RGB) or digital signal (component or RGB).

For example, a video source device which can output standard definition interlaced (480i/576i), standard definition progressive (480p/576p) and/or high definition (720p/1080i) can be attached to just one component input and the iScan VP30 will adapt to the input signal with the correct behavior. This is called "AutoVFR™", for Automatic Video Format Routing.

1 RGBHV/Component input

The RGBHV/Component input on the iScan VP30 will accept and process standard definition progressive (480p/576p), high definition (720p/1080i) and VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA computer signals at 60 Hz. Any signal that is processed can be output from the iScan VP30 as either an analog (component or RGB) or digital signal (component or RGB).

4 HDMI inputs

The HDMI inputs on the iScan VP30 will accept and process standard definition interlaced (480i/576i), standard definition progressive (480p/576p), high definition (720p/1080i) and VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA computer signals at 60 Hz. The HDMI inputs can accept a signal with RGB 4:4:4, YCbCr 4:4:4, or YCbCr 4:2:2 colorspace.

The iScan VP30 does process an HDCP-encrypted signal and output the signal on the HDMI output with the HDCP encryption intact. If the input signal is HDCP-encrypted then the analog outputs of the iScan VP30 must be turned off for legal constraints.

If the incoming signal is not HDCP protected, and if it is at a resolution of 480i/p, 576i/p, 720p, 1080i, or VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA computer signals at 60 Hz, then it can be scaled by the iScan VP30 and output as an analog (component or RGB) or digital signal (component or RGB).

If your source has a DVI output (and no HDMI output), a DVI-to-HDMI adapter or cable will be needed to connect this source to the VP30. The same is true, if your display does not have an HDMI input, but does have a DVI input. Typically, DVI sources and displays only use RGB 4:4:4 colorspace.

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4. What signal does the iScan VP30 output?

There is one analog output and one digital output. Only one output is active at a time.

The analog output colorspace can be either RGB or component, YPrPb. Sync options for the output video include separate H & V syncs, separate composite sync, or sync on the video. Sync on video can be either bi-level or tri-level sync. In addition, the separate sync signals’ polarity can be inverted if required. To use the iScan VP30 with a cable terminated with RCA connections, you will need RCA-to-BNC adapters.

The digital output colorspace can also be either RGB or component, YCbCr. Additionally, when component colorspace is selected, the sub-sampling can be either 4:4:4 or 4:2:2. These options may be limited by the display that you connect to. The sync on the H & V syncs can also be inverted. If your source has a DVI output (and no HDMI output), a DVI-to-HDMI adapter or cable will be needed to connect this source to the VP30. The same is true, if your display does not have an HDMI input, but does have a DVI input. Typically, DVI sources and displays only use RGB 4:4:4 colorspace.

The iScan VP30 is fully configurable with respect to output resolution and aspect ratio. There is a wide range of standard output formats supplied. Predefined formats include 480p, 576p, 540p, 720p, 1080i, 1080p, VGA, SVGA, XGA, SXGA, various plasma resolutions (852x480, 1280x768, 1024x1024 ALiS, 1365x1024, etc.), DLP resolutions (1280x720, 1024x576), various LCoS resolutions (1400x1050, 1365x1024, etc.), and various CRT resolutions (1440x960, 1440x1152, etc.).

Alternatively, it is possible to easily define an output format. This can all be done from the front panel of the iScan VP30 or with the On Screen Display (OSD) using the remote control without the need to use any PC-based programming tools. Typically, you'd probably just start from one of the predefined formats and modify it to fit your needs. For instance, if you need 854x480 instead of 852x480, you can just increase the horizontal active video area by 2 pixels.

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5. What audio formats can the iScan VP30 support?

The audio section of the iScan VP30 supports S/PDIF formatted audio with sample rates ranging from 24kHz to 192kHz. It will likely handle sample rates beyond this range, but is only guaranteed to support sample rates within this range. The iScan VP30 will pass digital audio having any bit-depth resolution up to 24 bits, at all supported sample rates.

The iScan VP30 will also pass compressed digital audio (e.g. Dolby Digital or DTS) provided the audio bitstream has been properly formatted for S/PDIF (IEC60958 or EIAJ-CP1201 standard) transmission by the digital audio source (according to international standard IEC61937). The iScan VP30 does not alter the sample rate, format, or content of the digital audio whatsoever; it merely inserts a programmable delay into the transmission path.

Users should take care to use proper digital audio cables in order to guarantee valid audio reception and re-transmission. Both coax and optical cables should have high-quality, positive mating connectors at both ends. Coax cables should have a 75-ohm characteristic impedance. The use of couplers or other types of adapters to extend the digital audio cabling is not recommended.

The HDMI inputs will also accept audio, given that the video signal is on the same input. If the audio format is Dolby Digital, dts, or PCM then the audio available on the HDMI output from the source will be available at optical/coaxial digital outputs. Excluded formats include Dolby TrueHD, Dolby Digital Plus, dts-HD, MLP (DVD-Audio) and DSD (SACD) which SPDIF connections are incapable of carrying due to bandwidth limitations.

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6. Tell me more about the HDMI connections on the iScan VP30

The HDMI inputs on the iScan VP30 can process 480i/p, 576i/p, 720p, 1080i, and VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA@60Hz. The HDMI input and output connectors on the iScan VP30 are backwards compatible with DVI-D inputs and outputs when used with an HDMI-to-DVI adapter or cable.

Most sources that have an HDMI output also carry HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection). If this is the case, the analog outputs on the iScan VP30 must be turned off. This is a legal constraint. If the incoming signal does not have HDCP and it is one of the resolutions that the iScan VP30 can process, this signal can be output as an analog signal with either RGB or component colorspace at any resolution between VGA and 1080p.

Note that if you have an HDCP source and a non-HDCP display, you will probably not get a picture, whether or not you use the iScan VP30.

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7. What kind of aspect ratio control does the iScan VP30 offer?

The iScan VP30 offers full control over the input and output aspect ratio.

Input aspect ratio

With respect to input aspect ratios, a full range of control is offered by the iScan VP30. There are 3 predefined input aspect ratio settings:
4:3 full frame
4:3 letterbox
16:9 full frame

You may also specify any other active aspect ratio for the input by manually zooming/panning the input image. This also allows the user to reformat the image in any way desired, so the iScan VP30 doesn't enforce a set of fixed aspect ratios.

If you would like to zoom in on the image to remove the small black letterbox bars found with a 1.85:1 source on a 16:9 display, then you can simply do so without having to guess at the numeric aspect ratio which would do this. The user can save up to four input aspect ratio presets which the user can define.

Output aspect ratio

The iScan VP30 supports 4:3, 5:4 and 16:9 and 2.35:1 output aspect ratios, which are the aspect ratios of the majority of displays today. Additionally, the user can define a screen aspect ratio between 1.01:1 and 3.00:1.

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8. What video processing technology does the iScan VP30 use?

The iScan VP30 uses a SiI504 chip to deinterlace incoming Standard Definition signals (480i/576i). The 10-bit scaling engine is a custom design of our own which introduces minimal phase and amplitude errors and provides better performance than we've seen in competing products. The scaler can scale up or down, so it can handle all types of aspect ratio conversions, unlike some other scaling products.

Anchor Bay's technology is known as Precision Video Scaling II™.

For fixed pixel displays (plasma, DLP, LCD, LCoS), all Standard Definition signals have to be deinterlaced and then scaled to the native resolution of the display in order to produce a correct picture. The same is true of 720p and 1080i content, if the display does not have a native resolution of 720p or 1080i respectively.

Using the iScan VP30 to upconvert signals to the native resolution of your fixed pixel display should in most cases allow you to automatically bypass the video processor built into your display.

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9. How does the iScan VP30 handle different input signals and how can these signals be output from the iScan VP30 ?

The iScan VP30 can deinterlace standard definition interlaced (480i/576i) signals and scale progressive and high definition signals(480p/576p/720p/1080i) signals. The iScan VP30 can also scale VGA, SVGA, XGA, and SXGA signals at 60Hz on the RGBHV and HDMI inputs. Any signal that is processed can be output from the iScan VP30 as either an analog (component or RGB) or digital signal (component or RGB).

Input Signal What iScan VP30 does to the signal Component Output RGBHV Output HDMI Output
Composite Video (480i/576i) Deinterlaced
/Scaled
Yes Yes Yes
S-Video (480i/576i) Deinterlaced
/Scaled
Yes Yes Yes
Component Video (480i/576i) Deinterlaced
/Scaled
Yes Yes Yes
Component Video (480p/576p) Scaled Yes Yes Yes
Component Video (720p/1080i) Scaled Yes Yes Yes
Component Video (all other resolutions) Not Accepted No No No
Component Video (480i/576i on RGBHV/Component Input) Not Accepted No No No
Component Video (480p/576p, 720p, 1080i on RGBHV/Component Input) Scaled Yes Yes Yes
Component Video (all other resolutions on RGBHV/Component Input) Not Accepted No No No
RGBHV (VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA@60Hz on RGBHV/Component Input) Scaled Yes Yes Yes
RGBHV (all other resolutions on RGBHV/Component Input) Not Accepted No No No
HDMI/DVI (480i with HDCP) Deinterlaced / Scaled No No Yes
HDMI/DVI (480p/576p/720p/1080i with HDCP) Scaled No No Yes
HDMI/DVI (480p/576p/720p/1080i without HDCP) Scaled > Yes Yes Yes
HDMI/DVI (VGA/SVGA/XGA/SXGA@60Hz) Scaled Yes Yes Yes
HDMI/DVI (all other resolutions) Not Accepted No No No
SD-SDI (480i/576i) Deinterlaced
/Scaled
Yes Yes Yes

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10. Tell me more about the lipsync correction on the iScan VP30

The iScan VP30 has 4 discrete digital audio inputs (2 optical and 2 coaxial) and 1 analog audio input (L/R) each of which can be assigned to any of the video inputs. The HDMI inputs can accept audio, if the video signal is on the same input. If the incoming HDMI signal has HDCP, then the iScan VP30 can not output this audio using the optical or coaxial digital outputs, only the HDMI output. When you switch to a particular video input, then the audio input which has been user-assigned to that video input will also be selected. For example, when you switch to Video 1, then the audio input which has been user-assigned to Video 1 will also be selected.

The digital audio outputs provide a delay which matches the video processing delay of the iScan VP30. Note that this delay will vary depending on the current configuration and processing mode of the iScan VP30. 50 Hz sources will require a different amount of delay than 60 Hz sources, and frame rate conversion requires more delay than no frame rate conversion.

The correct audio delay for all inputs is set automatically, so you need to do nothing extra to match audio and video delays. In addition, there is a user-adjustable delay which can be added or subtracted on top of the automatically set delay for problem sources.

Anchor Bay's digital audio technology is called "Precision AV Lipsync™".

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11. Does the iScan VP30 have an On Screen Display (OSD)?

Yes, there is an OSD that allows you to control all the major parameters: output resolution, input and output aspect ratio, frame rate conversion, picture controls, and audio delay

There's also a 2 line, 20 character display on the front panel, mainly for initial setup purposes when you may not have a picture on your display yet.

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12. Tell me more about the frame rate conversion feature on the iScan VP30

There are 3 basic operating modes for frame rate (or vertical frequency) conversion:
  • Source-lock mode where the output frame rate exactly matches the input frame rate.
  • Arbitrary output frame rate which is not locked to the input.
  • Progressive source-lock mode with frame rate conversion to an even multiple of the source frame rate. 24 Hz film-source material using a 3:2 pulldown pattern can be output with 2:2 pulldown at 48 Hz or 3:3 pulldown at 72 Hz. 25 Hz film-source material using a 2:2 pattern can be output using 3:3 pulldown at 75 Hz. These output rates are fully locked to the original 24 or 25 Hz source rate and are not actually 'floating' as with several other scaler products which offer 72 or 48 Hz output frame rates without really locking to the original film source rate.

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13. How does the iScan VP30 detect incoming signals?

The iScan VP30 has been designed to detect which of the twelve possible input devices is turned on and is generating an active signal, and then to automatically switch to that input. With this capability, you can switch inputs simply by turning one input device on or by turning another device off.

The iScan VP30 also includes an "Input Priority" option which specifies which of the inputs to use when they are multiple active inputs.

There is also automatic source detection, so you can let the iScan VP30 do the switching if you wish. When you select an input source, one of the selections is "Auto", which is the iScan's automatic source switching. When in auto mode, the iScan VP30 will consult an internal priority list for the inputs (the list is user-configurable) and will choose the highest priority input that has an active signal.

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14. What kind of power supply does the iScan VP30 come with?

The iScan VP30 comes with a universal 6VDC @ 5A AC to DC external power adapter, which accepts 100-240 VAC at 50/60Hz.

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15. I have an A/V receiver to handle the switching of my A/V sources. How should I hook up the iScan VP30 in my set-up?

It is not necessary to route all the video signals through your A/V receiver. While this can be convenient, the iScan VP30 can also handle all the video switching for you and will also maintain A/V synchronization for all audio signals you choose to feed through it. In general, it's a good idea to minimize the amount of video switching that you're doing and the number of components that a video signal is routed through - i.e., you may not want to route everything through the receiver.

If you run your video and audio sources to the iScan VP30 first, you can then use the switching capabilities of the iScan VP30 instead of the A/V receiver. The audio output of the iScan VP30 can feed the A/V receiver and it can then do the audio processing (outside of simple audio delay to match A/V sync).

An alternate method would be to use the A/V receiver as the audio switcher and run a single digital output to the iScan VP30. To do so, the receiver needs to have a digital processing loop - i.e., you can select a source with the preamp, send it out a digital output to an external processor of some sort (in this case, the iScan VP30), and then send it back into the preamp for audio processing. The iScan VP30 will provide an audio delay which exactly matches the video processing delay. The A/V receiver will do everything else. There are very few receivers with this kind of functionality.

If the A/V receiver has a global delay function, then you could use this to delay the audio to match the video. However, you'll have to match the delays yourself, and you won't make use of the iScan VP30's ability to change the delay based on the type of video processing being performed.

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16. Will the iScan VP30 improve the picture quality of standard definition channels from my satellite system (DSS)?

Picture improvement of standard definition satellite channels is often very subjective, and depends to a great deal on exactly which aspects of the image are objectionable.

If you have a standard definition satellite feed which is loaded with compression artifacts or is blurry because of bandwidth limitations, then the iScan VP30 (or most other video processors, for that matter) may not bring much improvement to the picture.

However, the iScan VP30 may react better to this type of problem than your display would, but that very much depends on the specific display you use. If your source is reasonably clean, then the iScan VP30 should do a good job of making it look good on the big screen.

If your complaints are in regards to the display's deinterlacing or scaling capabilities, then the iScan VP30 should be a noticeable improvement.

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17. What does the color of the power LED on my iScan VP30 mean?


iScan VP30 power LED color table:

LED Description
Standby Mode or
Front Panel Brightness set to 0
Red LED No Signal Received
Green LED Unknown/Unsupported Signal Received
Blue LED The iScan VP30 is processing the input
(Blinking) The iScan VP30 is processing the HDCP input signal but the display is not HDCP compliant (DVI or Analog)

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18. What do the different frame rate options mean?

  1. First of all, note that there are separate settings for 60 Hz sources and 50 Hz sources. This allows you, for instance, to configure the iScan's output to behave differently with NTSC and PAL sources. One potential advantage of this is that if you have a display which only works at a single frame rate - say, 60 Hz - that you can have the iScan run in locked mode (see below) for 60 Hz sources but convert all 50 Hz sources to the 60 Hz frame rate the display needs.

  2. Locked mode (1:1). This means that the iScan's output frame rate tracks the input rate - i.e., the output rate is locked to the input rate. In the 1:1 mode - i.e., 60 Hz source-locked to 60 Hz, and 50 Hz source-locked to 50 Hz - there is always exactly one output frame for every input frame/field. This mode has the advantage that there are never any dropped or repeated frames (unless the source itself does this). One disadvantage of this mode is that when the video source is changed, the iScan has to re-lock to the new input signal timing. This causes a disruption in the iScan's output signal while the locking process occurs, and can cause many displays to loose sync to the iScan's signal and temporarily blank.

  3. Unlocked mode. This means that the iScan's output frame rate is independent of the input rate. Regardless of any variations in the input, the output frame rate will be fixed at the specified value. This mode results in the most stable output signal as it's independent of any changes in the input signal. Unlike the locked mode(s), the iScan's output signal timing will not be disrupted when the input source is changed. However, it's guaranteed to cause dropped or repeated frames as the input and output frame rates are not the same. Note that regardless of what number the unlocked output frame rate is set to, it will never be identical to the input rate in this mode as the output signal timing is independent of the input timing. These dropped/repeated frames can result in visible irregularities in smooth motion, sometimes called motion judder or stutter.

  4. Locked mode (2:2 or 3:3). For standard definition interlaced sources the iScan can detect 2:2 and 3:2 pulldown cadences and convert these to either a 2:2 or 3:3 frame repetition rate. The main advantage of this is for 60 Hz sources using 3:2 pulldown, as the irregular 3:2 pattern can be converted to 2:2 at 48 Hz or 3:3 at 72 Hz. In these modes, each original film frame is repeated exactly 2 or 3 times, respectively, and motion is therefore smoother. Note that these modes are only useful when the video source is film-based - i.e., 3:2 pulldown for 24 Hz film on 60 Hz sources, and 2:2 pulldown for 25 Hz film on 50 Hz sources. If the source is not film-based, then the end result is a lot like unlocked mode without that mode's stability advantages.

  5. Motion-judder test pattern. The iScan has a built-in test pattern generator to help you determine which frame rates your display supports. This is the test pattern with the vertical bar which pans horizontally back and forth across the screen. Note that this test pattern is used to determine the capabilities of your display, and does not provide any indication of motion smoothness (or lack thereof) in the iScan's output. The test pattern is used with the unlocked output mode of the iScan. You set the (unlocked) output frame rate to be the one you're testing your display for, and observe if the back and forth panning motion of the test pattern is smooth or if it jerks or stutters. If the former, then the display supports that particular resolution and frame rate without performing any frame rate conversion of its own; if the latter, then the display is performing frame rate conversion on the signal.

  6. Examples. These configuration options provide a lot of flexibility to deal with differing source and display characteristics. Let's look at a few examples:

    a) The display only supports 60 Hz input. In this case, the iScan must produce a (nominal) 60 Hz output. For 60 Hz sources you can run in either 1:1 source-locked mode, or in unlocked mode with the output frame rate set to approximately 60 Hz. You might choose unlocked mode if the display takes a long time to re-sync to new inputs and you channel-surf a lot. Locked mode will provide the smoothest motion and guarantee no dropped or repeated frames. For 50 Hz sources, you'd set the iScan's output to unlocked with a (nominal) 60 Hz frame rate. This will result in some motion irregularities as the iScan periodically repeats frames to convert the 50 Hz input to the 60 Hz output rate, but since the display only supports 60 Hz inputs there's not much you can do.

    b) The display only supports 50 Hz input. This is the opposite of case A, and the required configuration is also the opposite - i.e., the output frame rate for 60 Hz source should be set to 50 Hz unlocked, and the rate for 50 Hz sources can be set to either 1:1 locked or unlocked at 50 Hz (for all the same reasons noted in the first example).

    c) The display supports a wide range of frame rates (e.g., a CRT projector). In this case you can configure things most any way you like. If motion judder with 3:2 pulldown bothers you, then use the iScan's 48 Hz or 72 Hz source-locked output options for film-based 480i sources. If not, then 60 Hz locked is a good choice. For 50 Hz sources, unless you notice display flicker at 50 Hz, you'd probably want to run at 50 Hz locked to avoid repeated/dropped frames.

    d) A digital display supports a narrow range of frame rates, either around 50 Hz or 72/75 Hz. If the display supports both 50 Hz and 48 Hz, and the primary use of 60 Hz source is film-based material, then you would likely want to configure the iScan as 48 Hz source-locked for 60 Hz sources, and 50 Hz locked (or unlocked, if desired) for 50 Hz sources. If the higher frame rate (72/75) is desired or required, then both source types can be configured for the 3:3 source-locked output option. For non-film material you may find that there's too much motion stutter, although that tends to be a very personal thing as not everyone perceives this the same way (as with low frame rate display flicker).

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Related Information

For additional product support, contact Anchor Bay:

Toll free: 1-866-423-DVDO (3836)
Email: help@anchorbaytech.com

Office hours are 9am-5pm PST Monday-Friday excluding holidays.

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