Here's a thread for people to discuss their TV-Out graphics adapters, since I couldn't find one dedicated to the subject already. Over the past few days of trying to build a decent, functional PVR system from both new parts and those found on hand, I've had my share of experiences:
Matrox Marvel G200 TV
No drivers for Windows XP or 2003. Don't even bother.
Abit Siluro GeForce 2 T400 AGP
The Chrontel 7007 TV-out encoder chip means limited TV-Out options. I was actually fairly pleased with the TV-out quality, but unfortunately, it defaults to significant underscan on NTSC, meaning you get large, noticeable black borders around the TV-Out output. None of the nVidia drivers I tried (29.42, 43.45, 77.72) would allow this to be changed. The newest nVidia drivers I tried would promptly crash if you tried to mess with the TV-Out parameters on this card. The only thing I found that would compensate for the underscan was the TVTool app (version 9.7), which would allow the card to be set to "Full Screen" mode, which give a signal that would fill the TV screen with slight overscan. However, TVTool has its own set of problems (it's not free, not easily purchased quickly, and has some software bugs). Due to the underscan problem, I don't recommend this graphics adapter for TV-Out.
PNY Verto GeForce FX 5500 AGP (bought yesterday at CompUSA for $60, after rebates)
No matter what drivers I tried, I have a bitch of a time getting colors to look similarly saturated to the broadcast signal (they look desaturated by default). Additionally, the card outputs a rather noisy TV-Out signal...there is a noticeable "interference" type of pattern in the signal, no matter what settings or driver versions I tried (trust me, I ran the gamut). The pattern looks like a repeating diagonal linear color/brightness distortion that moves horizontally, and it is most noticeable when viewing static images or cartoons. Other than that, the card works decently with the drivers, and doesn't crash too often (just don't try setting PAL when connected to an NTSC television, or you'll be reinstalling the drivers). It's possible to set all of the major TV-out signal parameters (position, size, brightness/contrast, overscan, anti-flicker, etc.). Don't depend on the card's advertised MPEG-2 decoder either. It may provide some assistance, but my poor little 900Mhz AMD Thunderbird was still hitting 75% CPU utilization (averaging 50-55%) when playing back recorded MPEG-2 files. Due to its noisy output signal and the effort required to customize the TV-Out signal to get it to look "decent", I don't recommend this graphics adapter for TV-Out either.
PS - Also, you don't want to use the version 77.72 nVidia drivers, as there is an Overlay gamma settings problem that can't be fixed. Try the 77.76 beta drivers, which resolve this issue, or earlier drivers.
These are the only cards I've tried so far. Can anyone recommend a card that has a TV-Out signal that rivals broadcast television? Does anyone have experience with the Radeon 9200/9250's? How about the Radeon 7000, or GeForce FX 5200's? All I really want is a nice, simple graphics adapter for less than $70 with a good TV-Out signal, preferably one that can be picked up in a common retail electronics store. Is it too much to ask?
Matrox Marvel G200 TV
No drivers for Windows XP or 2003. Don't even bother.
Abit Siluro GeForce 2 T400 AGP
The Chrontel 7007 TV-out encoder chip means limited TV-Out options. I was actually fairly pleased with the TV-out quality, but unfortunately, it defaults to significant underscan on NTSC, meaning you get large, noticeable black borders around the TV-Out output. None of the nVidia drivers I tried (29.42, 43.45, 77.72) would allow this to be changed. The newest nVidia drivers I tried would promptly crash if you tried to mess with the TV-Out parameters on this card. The only thing I found that would compensate for the underscan was the TVTool app (version 9.7), which would allow the card to be set to "Full Screen" mode, which give a signal that would fill the TV screen with slight overscan. However, TVTool has its own set of problems (it's not free, not easily purchased quickly, and has some software bugs). Due to the underscan problem, I don't recommend this graphics adapter for TV-Out.
PNY Verto GeForce FX 5500 AGP (bought yesterday at CompUSA for $60, after rebates)
No matter what drivers I tried, I have a bitch of a time getting colors to look similarly saturated to the broadcast signal (they look desaturated by default). Additionally, the card outputs a rather noisy TV-Out signal...there is a noticeable "interference" type of pattern in the signal, no matter what settings or driver versions I tried (trust me, I ran the gamut). The pattern looks like a repeating diagonal linear color/brightness distortion that moves horizontally, and it is most noticeable when viewing static images or cartoons. Other than that, the card works decently with the drivers, and doesn't crash too often (just don't try setting PAL when connected to an NTSC television, or you'll be reinstalling the drivers). It's possible to set all of the major TV-out signal parameters (position, size, brightness/contrast, overscan, anti-flicker, etc.). Don't depend on the card's advertised MPEG-2 decoder either. It may provide some assistance, but my poor little 900Mhz AMD Thunderbird was still hitting 75% CPU utilization (averaging 50-55%) when playing back recorded MPEG-2 files. Due to its noisy output signal and the effort required to customize the TV-Out signal to get it to look "decent", I don't recommend this graphics adapter for TV-Out either.
PS - Also, you don't want to use the version 77.72 nVidia drivers, as there is an Overlay gamma settings problem that can't be fixed. Try the 77.76 beta drivers, which resolve this issue, or earlier drivers.
These are the only cards I've tried so far. Can anyone recommend a card that has a TV-Out signal that rivals broadcast television? Does anyone have experience with the Radeon 9200/9250's? How about the Radeon 7000, or GeForce FX 5200's? All I really want is a nice, simple graphics adapter for less than $70 with a good TV-Out signal, preferably one that can be picked up in a common retail electronics store. Is it too much to ask?