Does the Acer Aspire 4530 support TV out?

SyntaxSocialist
SyntaxSocialist Member Posts: 3 New User

My dad's got an old Acer Aspire 4530. I'm trying to determine if it has tv out capability so we can hook it up to his new TV with a VGA to composite adapter cable. It's got a VGA port, and that's really it...

 

I think his Aspire came with Vista (not sure if it was 32 or 64b, but its Athlon X2 64 would have supported either). He downgraded to XP.

As far as I've been able to determine, the 4530 has an NVIDIA GeForce 9100M G. But I haven't been able to determine if that GPU supports tv out. Any help you can provide would be appreciated. Maybe I'm just looking in the wrong places...

Best Answer

  • Vince53
    Vince53 Member Posts: 805 Practitioner WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓

    Welcome aboard, Syntax. I was able to find reviews of two versions of the Aspire 4530, and neither one mentioned TV. One detailed review listed its optical abilities as having a webcam and the ability to support an external monitor and its own monitor at the same time.

     

    Based on that review, I do not believe that it can support a TV set.

Answers

  • Vince53
    Vince53 Member Posts: 805 Practitioner WiFi Icon
    Answer ✓

    Welcome aboard, Syntax. I was able to find reviews of two versions of the Aspire 4530, and neither one mentioned TV. One detailed review listed its optical abilities as having a webcam and the ability to support an external monitor and its own monitor at the same time.

     

    Based on that review, I do not believe that it can support a TV set.

  • SyntaxSocialist
    SyntaxSocialist Member Posts: 3 New User

    Thanks, Vince.

     

    Is the external monitor capability not indicative of an ability to hook up a tv?

     

    What's the diff?

  • Vince53
    Vince53 Member Posts: 805 Practitioner WiFi Icon

    Syntax, in the prehistoric days of my youth, most computers were hooked up to a TV. When I taught Computer Science, the entire class used donated TV sets. And then, one day, Apple came out with a monitor that was better than a TV.

     

    Those days are long gone. Modern computers can only be attached to a TV if they have special equipment. If your dad's machine could be attached to a TV, the reviews would have reported that. It might still be possible to buy a TV card for it, but I saw nothing in the reviews about such a card being available.

     

    Incidentally, those first computers were attached to an antenna outlet on the TV, and the TV received its computer signal through its antenna outlet. Today's computer signals  are too powerful for that method.

  • SyntaxSocialist
    SyntaxSocialist Member Posts: 3 New User

    Thanks. That helps somewhat. Not sure I understand the mechanics of it, but your rationale seems well-informed. That's a real bummer; it's the sort of thing I would just expect to be natively supported.

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