[quote name='BULL_Ship'][quote name='AtlusParker'][quote name='Oktoberfest']is this the same as the red-yellow-white cables? or is it for better tvs and stuff[/quote]
Component splits the video single into three colors (red, blue, green) to prevent them from bleeding so you get a crisp, vibrant picture. Component is way better than composite and slightly better than S-Video, although you may not notice the difference between the two. You will need component jacks on your TV to use this.[/quote]
UH wrong
Component video consists of three signals. The first is the luminance signal, which indicates brightness or black & white information that is contained in the original RGB signal. It is referred to as the "Y" component. The second and third signals are called "color difference" signals which indicate how much blue and red there is relative to luminance. The blue component is "B-Y" and the red component is "R-Y". The color difference signals are mathematical derivatives of the RGB signal.
Green doesn't need to be transmitted as a separate signal since it can be inferred from the "Y, B-Y, R-Y" combination. The display device knows how bright the image is from the Y component, and since it knows how much is blue and red, it figures the rest must be green so it fills it in.
http://www.projectorcentral.com/component.htm
OWNED[/quote]
Oh no. I have been owned on a message board. Too bad I don't give a shit. Besides, it sounds like the only part I was wrong about was calling the B&W signal green.