Basic Operation; The Procedure From Projection To Turning Off The Power - Taxan KG-PS232Xh User Manual

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Basic Operation

The Procedure from Projection to Turning Off the Power

Basic Operation
This section provides a simple description of the method of operation from pro-
jector setup, to video projection, and finishing up. For the detailed operational
methods of the various operations, please see the respective pages with the de-
scription.
1
Placement
Determine the setup locations of the screen and the projector and set up the
items.
See "Screen Size and Projection Distance" for information about distance and place-
ment considerations at the time of setup. See Page E-25.
2
Connecting Personal Computers and Video Equipment
Connect the projector and your equipment.
To make connection with the RGB connector of a personal computer, see Con-
nections with Personal Computer on Page E-26.
To make connection with the video connector (RCA jack) of video equipment,
or an S-video connector, see "Connections with Typical Video Equipment" on
Page E-28.
To make connection with the YCbCr connector, or YPbPr connector of video
equipment, see "Using YCbCr Connectors or YPbPr Connectors" on Page E-29.
KG-PS232Xh/232X | KG-PV131X/131S User's Manual
Note
In consideration of quality, perfection is expect-
ed, but very rarely black or bright dots may exist
among the pixels of DLP® type projectors. Thank
you for your understanding.
Please purchase a screen separately.
Technical Point
What is an RGB connector?
This is a connector used for transferring video signals to
a monitor or other equipment. The three colors R (red), G
(green), and B (blue) are separated and transferred as an
analog signal with this system. The display of a personal
computer is expressed by the RGB color space, and synthe-
sizing the three colors permits all colors to be reproduced.
These connectors mainly use a standard called mini D-Sub
15-pin that describes their form, and control signals used for
signal synchronization, as well as other signals, are trans-
ferred at the same time as the RGB color signal.
What is a Video Connector, an S-connector,
a YCbCr Connector, and a YPbPr Connector?
Several types of connectors are used as video connectors
including composite video connectors, separate video con-
nectors, and component video connectors.
Composite video connectors are usually called pin jacks or
RCA jacks, and they are mainly included on video decks,
document cameras, etc.
Separate video connectors are most typically called S-video,
and because they take the form of mini DIN 4-pin connec-
tors, mini DIN 4-pin may also be used to describe S-video.
Component video connectors are called color-difference
input connectors. The usual NTSC (480i) signal connector
that transfers the C color signal which is divided into the B-Y
color-difference signal Cb (Pb), and the R-Y color-difference
signal Cr (Pr) is described as Y/Cb/Cr. Connectors that can
be used for video formats above NTSC may be described as
Y/Pb/Pr.
Note
A commercially-available component cable is re-
quired to make connection with equipment hav-
ing YCbCr connectors such as DVD players, etc.
A commercially-available component cable is
required to make connection with equipment
having YPbPr connectors such as high definition
video equipment, etc.
E-21

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