| Item Number: |
EXT-VGA-CAT5-148S |
| Product Name: |
1x8 VGA CAT5 Distribution S |
| Manufacturer: |
Gefen, Inc. |
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*DISCONTINUED* |
1x8 VGA CAT5 Distribution S from ComputerCableStore™. One VGA Input, Eight VGA Outputs The 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier is the perfect solution for anyone who needs to send one source to multiple displays in remote locations at the same time. The 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier has eight RJ-45 output connector and one VGA input. The 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier's RJ-45 connectors are connected to up to eight VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier receivers using industry standard CAT5 cables. The receivers can be placed up to 330 feet away from the transmitter.Simply connect your VGA video source to the 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier's input using the supplied VGA cable. Then connect up to eight VGA displays to the VGA CAT5 receivers. Then power the 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier and the receivers will get power from the CAT5. Note: VGA output 1 is the primary connection and is used for the main display. VGA output 2 through 8 follow the main display. The VGA displays attached to the 1:8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier MUST have the same native resolution in order to get a picture.The 1x8 VGA CAT5 Distribution Amplifier will also extend a component signal or Composite Video w/ L+R analog audio. For this to work, you will need a VGA to Component Cables and a VGA Female to Female Adapter. Composite video is the format of an analog television (picture only) signal before it is combined with a sound signal and modulated onto an RF carrier. Composite video is often designated by the CVBS acronym, meaning any of "Color, Video, Blank and Sync", "Composite Video Baseband Signal", "Composite Video Burst Signal", or "Composite Video with Burst and Sync". It is usually in a standard format such as NTSC, PAL, or SECAM. It is a composite of three source signals called Y, U and V (together referred to as YUV) with sync pulses. Y represents the brightness or luminance of the picture and includes synchronizing pulses, so that by itself it could be displayed as a monochrome picture. U and V represent hue and saturation or chrominance, between them they carry the color information. They are first mixed with two orthogonal phases of a color carrier signal to form a signal called the chrominance. Y and UV are then combined. Since Y is a baseband signal and UV has been mixed with a carrier, this addition is equivalent to frequency-division multiplexing. The term Video Graphics Array (VGA) refers specifically to the display hardware first introduced with the IBM PS/2 line of computers in 1987, but through its widespread adoption has also come to mean either an analog computer display standard, the 15-pin D-subminiature VGA connector or the 640×480 resolution itself. While this resolution has been superseded in the personal computer market, it is becoming a popular resolution on mobile devices.
- Easily distribute one source to eight simultaneous displays
- Extends video signals up to 330 feet over CAT-5e
- Supports component video distribution
- Maintains 1920 x 1200 resolution video
- Allows eight monitors to be connected to the same video source at the same time
- Installs in minutes
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