Skeptic Guy
Raccoon Death Squad Leader
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2006
- Messages
- 6,990
You might have to set up the audio separatly for each input. You have Surround sound selected for HDMI 1 (your cable box connection) but do you have SS selected for HDMI 2?
It would be a fairly simple thing to have a bit of firmware that would recognize whether the signal coming in the HDMI port is HDMI or DVI but the engineer who designed the system knows the difference and barely even thinks about the common user's knowledge.
Programmers get the same way, they may design a program to do a task that they are not expert at.
for instance a video editing system
The programmer sets up the user interface and later on the users are cursing him "why did they put this function in this menu, its just so ackward?"
Our Final Cut system just craped out. The audio would lag the video (yes, not the other way around) by several seconds. Turns out that Final Cut does not 'like' a Sony DSR-1800 DVCAM tape deck and the communication between the computer and the VTR was corrupting the user preferences. Apple help line told us to create a new user, that fixed it but how stupid is that? So now we have a cheapo- DSR-11 VTR connected to Final Cut and we have the much more expensive DSR-1800 connected to our Pinnacle edit suite (which is high end consumer video editing whereas Final Cut is professional grade) Pinnacle is quite happy with the DSR-1800.
So are there any 'fixes' coming from Apple for this problem? Nope! Their solution is not to use a DSR 1800 since few production companies use DVCAM anyway. But how stupid is it that a VTR can corrupt settings in the editing software in the first place!!!
end rant........ Apple, bah!
I think that's probably it. The HDMI inputs on each TV set are configured differently.
Interesting comments on the edit systems' issues. While I don't work in the division, my company does a lot of high-end post work and I didn't know that Final Cut had those kind of issues. I wonder if Avid does?