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To use skew adjustment
1 Display a skew pattern on the appropriate computer. You can either use the
supplied skew pattern or create your own:
Using the supplied skew pattern
i Insert the supplied Installation CD-ROM into the CD player of the computer.
ii Within Windows, use the My Computer
option (usually available as a desktop icon
or within the Start menu) to view the
contents of the CD-ROM. Double-click
the Skew entry to display the standard
test pattern. If necessary, maximise the
application window so that the image lls
the screen.
The screen will show a series of ne red,
green and blue crosses which should all
be in line, vertically and horizontally. Skew
affects the horizontal placement of the colours and using this pattern it is
much easier to discover which, if any, colours are being adversely affected by
the cable link.
Creating a skew test pattern
i Run any image creation/editing application, such as the Paint program
supplied with Windows.
ii Using the image application create three
stacked horizontal rectangles (one red,
one green and one blue) that ll the
width of the screen.
iii Draw a vertical black line down across
the coloured bars and then repeat this
vertical line at intervals along the width
of the coloured bars. These lines create
breaks across the colours and give you
more opportunities to view the horizontal
position of each colour relative to the others.
2 On the remote user keyboard (connected to a User Station C5 Pro),
simultaneously, press the hotkeys (by default, and ) along with to
enter conguration mode.
The three keyboard indicators (‘Num Lock’,
‘Caps Lock’ and ‘Scroll Lock’) will now begin
to ash in sequence.
Remote user skew adjustment
The category 5, 5e and 6 cabling supported by the MC5 consists of four pairs of
wires per cable. Three of these pairs are used to convey red, green and blue video
signals to the remote video monitor. Due to the slight difference in twist rate
between these three pairs, the red, green
and blue video signals may not arrive at
precisely the same time. This is visible as
separate colour shadows on high contrast
screen images and is particularly apparent
when using higher screen resolutions and
some types of category 5e cables.
To alleviate this situation, the User Station
C5 Pro module provides internal skew
adjustment that can help to rectify the
situation. The skew adjustment works
by delaying or advancing the timing
of any of the red, green or blue colour
signals so that they are all delivered to
the monitor at precisely the same time.
For best results, the “skew” program supplied on the disk is the most accurate
way of setting skew as the red, green and blue lines are rendered exactly on the
screen as single pixel wide lines. The skew.bmp test pattern can also be used but
it is less accurate. Alternatively, you can create your own skew pattern using a
standard image creation package, as detailed opposite.
Convergence test
pattern showing the
RGB crosses. In this
case, the green signal
can be seen out of
line with the other
two colours.
12 3 4 5 6 7 8
8
6
5
2
8
6
5
2
Datasignal
Red
videosignal
Green
videosignal
Blue
videosignal
7
3
4
1
7
3
4
1