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posted to 24hoursupport.helpdesk,microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware,rec.boats.cruising
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Hi Guys, I need to get a VGA signal from the Nav Station in my boat to the monitor in the bridge. I could just run a VGA cable (about 4m worth) but I need to pass the cable through some small holes for the looming (sp?) and the DB15 connectors wont fit unless I make the hole bigger. I am thinking about running the VGA singal over CAT5e, which a Google search seems to suggest is possible. I was wondering if anyone had any better ideas, keeping costs fairly low. Has anyone here had any success cutting the end off a VGA cable and wiring on a new DB15 for example? Thanks in advance, -Al This cable, has a round connector in the center, and is intended to make it easier to penetrate walls. This cable is 50ft long, and claims to support 1600x1200 (refresh rate not stated, could be 60Hz). http://www.tripplite.com/EN/products...xtModelID=3351 Look for more "Easy Pull" items here. They also make DVI and HDMI versions. http://www.tripplite.com/EN/products...?txtEntryID=32 In all the advertising cruft on the pages, it doesn't state what the O.D. of the connector is. It looks like it might be 1" diameter or so, but hard to say for sure. It mentions pulling through 3/4" conduit here. That is, if you trust marketing people to pull cables. http://www.tripplite.com/shared/lite...yer/952906.pdf Another brand example here. RapidRun modular cabling system. 3/4" conduit. http://www.cablemeister.com/product.php?productid=50731 They also make RGBHV to VGA breakout cables. Such a cable would be missing signals for DDC (used by a computer to get resolution information from a monitor), but cables like this are sometimes used for projector devices connected to computers. Your application would probably be happy with the basic RGBHV signals. RGB is color, HV are sync signals. There are several ways to carry sync, including sync on green. So again, the requirements can vary a bit, and having all five RGBHV helps cover all possibilities. http://www.ramelectronics.net/render...ts/VGA2BNC.jpg The idea would be, you make the hole big enough, to pass the BNC connectors one at a time. The example picture above, has made the BNC connectors excessively fancy. A little extra slack on the five coaxes, would probably help. The solution is less ideal than the RapidRun, but perhaps easier to buy locally. You can connect the BNCs with some coax wires with mating BNCs on the end. I suppose you could buy BNC kits, as long as they're designed for the thin coax, and simply fit crimp BNCs on the end of each coax. So that would be another possibility. If soldering a VGA connector, the hard part would be connecting the RGB coax signals. Coax and soldering don't mix. Which is why I put so many "pull" style solutions in the above :-) If you visited me two hours after giving me a soldering job like that to do, I'd be in "full cuss mode". The insulation inside coax melts easily. Paul |
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