Not really: a TV has a different setup:
- it has a RF tuner, to bring the selected TV channel down from RF (radio frequency)
- It works with 60 times per second (for US) or 50 times per second (Europe) a new half-image (called interleafing) with the 2nd time the 2nd half.
While your monitor normally works with 60...100 total images per second, every time a whole picture.
Not in the last place also electrical interfacing is a problem: your DVD or VCR has Scart or RGB or HDMI connections. Most monitors only have VGA of DVI.
There are however convertors for this: one side Scart in and other side VGA of DVI. The only thing: these boxes are almost the same price as a second hand TV set.
With kind regards,
Henk
A "CRT" is a cathode ray tube. An old style computer monitor (not computer).
Old computer monitors are "CRT" the latest are "LCD".
In 2001, it looked like a triangular prism.
crt monitor situation used
If a CRT monitor has either a DVI or HDMI port then it can be connected to a DVI output port of a computer or other source. CRT monitors are now hard to find and few of them have any kind of digital input. The likely answer to the question is "no" but of course it depends on the features of the monitor
Few of the technologies used in Computer Monitors are CRT, LCD, LED, OLED & PLASMA.
CRT stands for Cathode Ray Monitor. These monitors have a glass screen.
There will be no effect on the computer speed if a CRT monitor's power cable is directly connected to the CPU. Though the PSU, or, the power supply unit must be upgraded to a 500 W one .
Jewelry and Antistatic wrist strap
Yes, as long as it has a 15-pin VGA connector.
his depends on what type of monitor you are using. If it is a CRT (the big long old one) or a LCD (newer flat screen). If it is a CRT, then the monitor is going bad, and you need to replace it. If it is an LCD, then it is probably just a color setting.
As LCD display technology improves, it now beats CRT for clarity and image stability. CRT based computer monitors are no longer mass produced and existing CRT monitors are usually several years old. As they age, the image becomes softer so there will be few CRT displays that can compare with a modern LCD screen.