Portable DVD Player Battery

This item was filled under Portable DVD Player

Battery Isolators Explained – For Powerful Systems

portable-dvd-player-batteryBattery isolators are those alternator and trouble saving devices that separate your primary battery system from your auxiliary battery. Most people run their amplifiers and added accessories from a secondary amp to lighten the load on other factory installed devices. The diode based isolators are basically two high current diodes.

These diode isolators are known for their durability and long life, and seldom fail. They do however sacrifice a bit power imputable the 0.5 volt drop of the incoming charge. This voltage drop will keep the battery from reaching maximum charge, but will allow it to maintain a high enough charge during peak use to keep your headlights and other devices from dimming, and power your amplifiers and added accessories.

There’s another type of battery isolator called the solenoid based battery isolator. These type of isolators use high current relays to control the flow of the current. The solenoid relays allow for maximum power with virtually no voltage drop across the system, but tend to be less reliable than the diode based isolators. They can heat up after prolonged use and melt the coils in the solenoids.

Whenever you add a second battery, make sure to get a sealed battery if you intend to place it inside the vehicle or in the trunk, and be sure to properly ground and fuse the battery. Failure to do so can create a lot of added heat and increase the risk of electrical fire or melted wires. Always err on the side of caution.

Read more information about portable dvd player and portable cd player


Region Free Portable DVD Player

This item was filled under Portable DVD Player

Portable Region Free Car DVD Players

region-free-portable-dvd-playerYou have with you DVDs from different parts of the world, including that British TV series DVD that you wanted to get for a long time. You are now back home and waiting for the opportunity to play that DVD. What could be a better time than this when you are off to a holiday with your car? You want your family to watch that DVD while you drive. When you try to play the DVD, you are surprised to see the words “wrong region” coming up on the screen.

You do not understand what that is. Is your car DVD player not working? Or is it that the DVD is faulty? The packing in which the DVD came says that the DVD is region free, which would mean that the DVD is meant for Region 0, that it is region free. What could be the problem? You are not being able to figure this out.

A region 0 or a region free DVD plays on all DVD players, if the player is region free. But there remains the question of mismatching of the video formats. It is the question of compatibility between Phase Alternating Line (PAL) and National Television System Committee (NTSC). Your portable car DVD player, which you bought from the United States plays only NTSC standard DVD, while the DVD that you had bought from the United Kingdom has a PAL video standard. Even if the DVD is based on digital format, it matters less when the DVD has a PAL standard and you are trying to play it on your portable car DVD which is in NTSC. That DVD will not play in your portable card DVD player.

The so called regions, that we hear so much about when buying a DVD disc or a player, are catagorised in the following way:

1. Region 1 – The U.S., U.S. territories and Canada

2. Region 2 – Europe, Japan, the Middle East, Egypt, South Africa, Greenland

3. Region 3 – Taiwan, Korea, the Philippines, Indonesia, Hong Kong

4. Region 4 – Mexico, South America, Central America, Australia, New Zealand, Pacific Islands, Caribbean

5. Region 5 – Russia (okay, former Russia), Eastern Europe, India, most of Africa, North Korea, Mongolia

6. Region 6 – China

7. Region 0 – All the countries in the world.

There are mainly three basic television broadcast standards in the world and these are, Phase Alternating Line (PAL), National Television System Committee (NTSC) and Séquentiel couleur à mémoire, French for “sequential color with memory” (SECAM). These three standards are incompatible wit each other, which would mean that all both, the DVD and your portable car DVD player have to be of the same standard.

NTSC standard was developed in the United States and the first ever colour broadcast came to that country in 1953. This was obviously based on NTSC standard and is now being used by many other countries in the American Continent as well as Japan and the Philippines. It has 525 horizontal scan lines at 60Hz frequency, for which it is sometimes referred to as “NTSC-525″. Out of the 525 lines, 486 lines are visible on the screen and the rest are synchronisation pulses, and for one, these are used to reposition the electronic gun in a television. Each of these visible lines is made up of 720 pixels, giving a total screen resolution of 720×486. NTSC has a frame rate of 29.97 frames per second which is rounded up and referred to as 30 frames per second.

PAL was developed in Europe and was introduced in early 1960′s. PAL was available in most of the European countries by that time, except France, who developed their own SECAM system. PAL works on 625 lines per frame at 50Hz frequency. PAL uses a wider channel bandwidth than NTSC which provides a better picture quality. PAL has eight versions and these are PAL B, PAL G, PAL H, PAL D, PAL I, PAL K, PAL K, PAL N and PAL M. All of these have different specifications from each other. PAL is used in China, India, Indonesia, Israel, Laos, Nepal, Pakistan, Thailand, Lebanon, Iraq, Iran, and United Kingdom, some European countries, some countries in South America and also in Africa.

SECAM uses frequency modulation technology to encode chrominance information on the sub-carrier. Chrominance along with luminance is one of the two components of a television signal. It defines the two attributes of a colour. The hue of the composite picture is defined by the frequency, while the saturation defines the amount of black. Luminance is the mathematical component of the red, blue and green components in a colour television. This combination is used to produce other colours on the television screen. SECAM has the same bandwidth as PAL and operates on 625 lines per frame.

Region free portable car DVD players are capable of playing all region DVDs regardless of the region code of the discs. These DVD players have built-in code converters, which lets any region DVD to be played on such players and viewed on the screen. These portable car DVD players play any zone, area, region code DVD without any additional equipment. You can play any region, any code, PAL or NTSC DVDs from Europe, Asia or anywhere in the world. Region free portable car DVD players are those which do not have an internal region lock and hence they are universal players, and they can play DVDs from any region as shown above. These are specifically called Region 0 DVD players, which accept code locked DVDs from other regions.

One does wonder why the region wise coding is done in DVDs. Some say it is the only way by which one could project the right of issue of such DVDs. The other aspect, which is being conjectured, is to maintain the price of the DVDs at the regional level. For example, a DVD movie, which has been released in the United States, is priced quite high compare to the price as and when it is available in India. Therefore, with regional codes built in the DVDs, it will be difficult to play the same DVD in the United States, which has been coded for India.

In many legal views code enforcement is a violation under the WTO free trade agreement. The coding of the players violates this specific law. This coding of DVD players has been seen as a serious violation of Trade Practices Act, as per the law set down by the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. A similar ruling also exists in New Zealand. As a result the DVD players, which include portable car DVD players, sold in Australia and New Zealand, are all of region 0 standard, meaning that the players are capable of playing any DVD, irrespective of their region coding.

Author by John Dulaney


Portable DVD Player Divx

This item was filled under Portable DVD Player

DVD to DivX – How to Convert DVD Movies to DivX Video Format

Divx is a popular multimedia system data format which allows for you to enjoy your favourite movies, video recording and shows on a assortment of devices. Among the best things about Divx is that it compresses the master copy file to make it smaller. This is ideal for not only storage purposes but also for sharing as well.

Large data file, even zipped ones, is hard or even impossible to share with others. Divx is an ideal solution for these problems. And, you can even convert your DVDs into Divx form so you’ll be able to enjoy them anywhere at any time. The first thing you’ll need to do is make sure you have Microsoft Media Player and an MP3 Codec installed. Then you’ll need to choose a conversion software program. Examples include AutoGK, XmPeg, Imtoo DVD to Divx Converter, DVD Ripper and many more. Once you’ve purchased and installed your conversion software, you’re ready to get started.

How to convert your DVDs into Divx format will depend on which conversion software program you have. Luckily most converters work much in as is way. When you use a conversion program, you will simply select the target output format you would like to convert your DVD into. For example, you would choose Divx if that is what you wanted.

After that, you insert your DVD into the drive and from there you can convert the whole thing, or just the specific chapters of your choosing. Some programs first convert DVDs into AVI format, then to Divx. Other people go straight from DVD format to Divx.

After some conversions with a good software program, you’ll be an old pro. Conversion software is helpful and affordable, with most programs costing under $50. You can watch them on your cellular phone or iPod if it supports the Divx format, or you can burn them on disks so you’ll have backup copies. Always make sure you understand and are adhering to the state and federal laws which relate to the copying and conversion of DVDs and other multimedia material.


?>