is there a certain lag.. if let's say I want to play a gaming console or surf the internet with a mouse etc. will there be a slight delay if my computer were to be 70ft away? playing video shouldn't be a problem even if there is a delay, but if i want to run a game or so, it would get annoy if there is a noticeable delay.
Questions 1 & 2, no to both. You're converting the signal, not simply patching it directly to Cat6. You are still limited to a certain distance, but that is far greater than you can achieve with HDMI alone.
I'm running HDMI over fiber optic. Granted it cost more, even for a short run, but it's future proof. You can run HDMI over 50Ω coax (five lines), Cat6 (one or two lines) or fiber (single or up to four strands).
is this point to point or can the cat cable be able to be plugged into a switch?
simdude2u 3 weeks ago
is there a certain lag.. if let's say I want to play a gaming console or surf the internet with a mouse etc. will there be a slight delay if my computer were to be 70ft away? playing video shouldn't be a problem even if there is a delay, but if i want to run a game or so, it would get annoy if there is a noticeable delay.
sirBadd 3 weeks ago
Does this support daisy chaining?
HWGuyEG 2 months ago
@thebeetalls
Questions 1 & 2, no to both. You're converting the signal, not simply patching it directly to Cat6. You are still limited to a certain distance, but that is far greater than you can achieve with HDMI alone.
I'm running HDMI over fiber optic. Granted it cost more, even for a short run, but it's future proof. You can run HDMI over 50Ω coax (five lines), Cat6 (one or two lines) or fiber (single or up to four strands).
pmgodfrey 2 months ago
Two questions:
1)Does this reduce video/audio quality at all?
2)Does using cat6 increase quality or range?
thebeetalls 3 months ago