The way I understand Video distribution is that you might need an amplified splitter. This is because if the signal strength drops too much you end up with a degraded picture.
Use a VDA- Video Distribution Amplifier. A powered device with one video composite input and a at least 2 or more composite video outputs. Take any output to the video in of any video device with a composite video in. Usually a BNC or RCA connector. Use shielded cable. preferrably 75 ohm coaxial type, however for short runs ( a few metres) the standard yellow lead that comes with AV red, white , yellow will suffice.
A composite signal is a mux or a bus signal. These can be thought of as a collection of other component signals.
That depend on what the signal is a composite of and how these components were combined. Please clarify question.
If the signal going in is Composite, then yes this should work fine.
to signal the coming of something
A; An analog oscilloscope will display a signal to a CRT the same principle as a TV can display movies
The width of the frequency spectrum
In case of TV broad casting, the Video Signal is not transmitted alone, but it accompanied by a number of other signals or pulses, which help the exact reproduction of the picture at the receiving end. These pulses include Blanking Pulses, Synchronizing pulses and Equalizing pulses. A combination of Picture signal and other Controlling signal or pulses is called Composite Signal. Thus Composite Video Signal may consist of Following Parts.Picture information (Data)Blanking Pulses (Delay Pulses)Vertical and Horizontal Synchronizing Pulses (controlling Pulses)Generally,A Combination of Data and Other Controlling Signal is Called Composite Signal .
Component video is carried on three wires, normally referred to as YUV or Y, Pb, Pr. The Y component carries the luminance information - the brightness. The other two carry color information. Connecting a component signal to a composite input will be difficult as composite uses a single connector that carries brightness and color signals on the same wire. If you connect the Y of the component signal to the composite input, you will see a monochrome image. With a very, very few exceptions, analog component video is limited to standard resolution, so the highest will be 480 line (North American) or 576 line (European). Composite connections handle only standard definition and there is no composite standard for HD video.
A signal of printer display on the desktop
advantage is that if we represent a composite signal in frequency domain........then we clearly see that how much signals are involved in composite signal and their separate peak values
A scope is nothing else then a display instrument it will amplify and display a signal on a CRT for visual analysis
The main difference between the tow is the signal. VGA uses an analog signal and DVI is a digital signal.