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🎮 Bring your retro games into the HD era—no lag, all nostalgia!
The Tendak 3RCA AV CVBS Composite & S-Video to HDMI Converter transforms analog signals from vintage consoles and devices into high-definition HDMI output with selectable resolutions up to 1080p. Featuring auto-save settings, shared audio inputs, and a durable metal case, it offers seamless integration of classic gaming and media equipment into modern HDTV setups with minimal lag and excellent picture quality.






| ASIN | B00V2ULHBS |
| Best Sellers Rank | #344 in Video Converters |
| Brand | Tendak |
| Color | S-Viceo & RCA to HDMI(Metal) |
| Compatible Devices | Gaming Console |
| Connector Type | HDMI, RCA |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 961 Reviews |
| External Testing Certification | Não aplicável |
| Finish | Hdmi |
| Input Voltage | 240 Volts |
| Item Dimensions | 4.33 x 3.31 x 1.1 inches |
| Item Weight | 250 Grams |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 4.33 x 3.31 x 1.1 inches |
| Manufacturer | ztendak |
| Mfr Part Number | AV-069-BK |
| Model Number | AV-069-BK |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Number of Ports | 6 |
| Package Quantity | 1 |
| Power Plug Type | Type A - 2 pin (North American), Type B - 3 pin (North American) |
| Smart Home Compatibility | Not Smart Home Compatible |
| Specific Uses For Product | Video Game Console |
| UPC | 706693165971 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 1 Year Warranty |
C**K
Excellent product
This converter works great. High quality picture. This new version allows you to cycle through 6 resolutions: 480I, 480P, 720I, 720P, 1080I, 1080P. So you can keep native resolution of your original source. I have not tested with a games system yet (will be testing with an old PlayStation 2). I primarily bought this to watch old VHS tapes played on an old player with only RCA output. For this it works great. Also , quality seems high. Product is metal cased and has very high level finish. Updated 10/11/2020: I tested with a Playstation 2. My older 60 inch Sharp tv still has the RCA connectors on back so I was able to test native RCA and HDMI (through the Tendak). The picture looks about the same except that the image from the Tendak is a little brighter and maybe slightly less clear. The original output from the Playstation is not very good to start with so I believe the Tendak does a good job on the conversion.
J**R
Works great but maybe too great for 8-bit and 16-bit games.
This review is for the RCA & S-Video to HDMI box. For some reason there are reviews on here for a box that does the reverse. Like many others, I bought this device to connect vintage game systems to my HDTV (Panasonic TC-P42S1). The good news is that it works very well for doing that. I have a NES (composite), SNES (s-video), N64 (s-video), and Sega Genesis (composite) all running into a a/v switcher that then runs into this convertor. The Tendak outputs very impressive 720p (I tested the 1080 & it works too) with little to no stretching & no noticeable lag while playing. In those regards it exceeded my expectations for the price I paid. Unfortunately I am unhappy with the results. Everything is clean and for the N64 I actually like the results very much but for the NES, at lest in my opinion, the resulting larger wide screen 720p image doesn't do the 8-bit graphics any favors. The pixels are very sharp but just too big. Again, the Tendak convertor is doing exactly what it is supposed to do and it is doing an excellent job but for systems like the NES and SNES it may be doing too good of a job. I wish that the box could output a 4x3 image instead of scaling up to 16x9. I find that running the a/v switcher I'm using for the systems directly into the s-video input on my HDTV, and setting the TV to 4x3 yields more flattering results for 8-bit and 16-bit games. That being said, if you wanted to devote an HDMI port to your N64 exclusively I would highly recommend this convertor. I think the games look great (well for the N64). I wouldn't hesitate to purchase another Tendak product and I'd be very interested in a version of this convertor that didn't scale the video to 16x9 or at least gave you the option to run 4x3.
J**N
Good converter for the price
This is a revision to my original review. The first converter I was sent had a few issues, but the great customer service team at Tendak sent a replacement that works well. The device works well and is easy to use. The picture is sharp and clear, although colors are not preserved exactly from original source. This is probably dependent on signal quality from the input device. I like that this converter has inputs for both S-Video and Composite video, and can output either in 720p or 1080p. Few minor gripes, it would be nice if this had an on/off switch and could do letterboxing to preserve the input signal's aspect ratio. For the price though, it's hard to beat.
K**H
Works well with a VCR, with a few minor issues
I bought this to connect our old JVC VHS player to our new Samsung 4K UHD television. It works very well. The picture fills the screen and looks about as good as I would expect a converted VHS image to look. The on-screen menu from the VCR has some blurry letters, but they are still readable. I forgot to switch from S-Video to Composite to see if that helped the blurriness. Will test that and report back, but S-Video is supposed to be somewhat clearer, so I'm not holding my breath on it fixing anything. My complaints are minor: the S-Video cable keeps coming unplugged from the device. I'll try to bend the round part of the jack a bit and see if that makes it "stick". Also, the LED indicating the video resolution is very bright. If a dark room is your thing, you might put a piece of black electrical tape over it. Pros: Relatively inexpensive, works well, comes with everything you need to make it work Cons: S-Video cable keeps coming unplugged, bright LED, blurry VCR menu Overall, I would buy this device again if I needed one.
S**L
Does a terrible job at converting video. Price should be $5 or less.
I originally bought this product to upgrade from my cheap mini converter which only takes composite video. S-video is supposed to be a big step up from composite, so this Tendak product looked like a great deal. However, when I hooked it up it looked terrible. The worst thing is fragments of the picture going down the right side. Not only that, but the picture didn't look any better than my cheap composite converter! The color bleed is bad and the whole picture is just way too noisy for S-video. Hopefully you can see these things in the attached photos. Even when the original 4:3 picture is stretched in 720p mode you can still see the fragmentation strip on the right side. ALSO, when in 720p (or above modes), it doesn't even stretch it to fill the screen. My cheap mini converter does a better job of this! I did several tests using different cables and video sources, but the results were always the same. I even returned the first unit and exchanged it for a different one, hoping it was a factory problem. But still the same! I can't believe anyone would design and sell such a terrible product. Also I'm baffled as to why it is reviewed so highly by so many people. Maybe peoples' expectations are low, or they don't notice the fragments of video lining the right side. But I would hope that kind of thing is completely unacceptable to most people. If you're going to design a video converter with such features as 480i, 480p, 720p output via HDMI, and S-video & composite input, why would you not do at least a DECENT JOB?? Again, how does my cheap little mini converter do a better job than this $33 piece of junk? If you're looking for something cheap that takes composite video (the yellow connector), then just get the mini converter. If you're looking for something that takes S-video and outputs a nice signal, I think it would be worth it to spend the $99 for a Retro Tink which outputs a clean 480p signal. This Tendak product is NOT a good middle ground. I really wish it was.
B**2
Perfect for older Game Consoles.
I own a 55" Vizio M Series 4K TV. I bought this device to upscale my Retron 3 game console from 240p to 720p/1080p. The Retron 3 plays classic NES, SNES, and SEGA games. The output of the Retron 3 is Composite or S-Video cables. My TV supports Composite but doesn't recognize any output of 240p. Hence the need for the converter. The device worked great and converted the signal with no problem. You can choose either 720p or 1080p. I went with 720p as it looked better. The sound and picture are great! Button Lag: There was certainly button lag in the game play. However, my TV has a setting on it called "Low Game Latency". When this setting is turned off the button lag was about 120ms. When the setting is turned on, the button lag was slightly less than 30ms. Helped drastically. This is a perfect device for outputting an HDMI signal for older consoles, but be sure to check if your TV has a "game mode" or a "Low Game Latency" feature to prevent button lag.
A**R
Works, but almost unusable
I got this to hook up my N64 to my TCL 6 series TV using S-video. There are three different video modes to toggle through...720p, 1080p, and 480p. The massive issue with this product is that it on 720p and 1080p is that it forces your analog source to stretch to 16:9 which looks terrible, and there is absolutely no way to turn it off. My TCL TV doesn't have an option to change the aspect ratio to 4:3 on HDMI sources. The only game I have that supports widescreen is Perfect Dark 64, and it looks great upscaled to 1080p. Unfortunately that means every other game I own has to run on the 480p setting. I will say that using s-video on 480p looks slightly better than using the TV's composite input. (Most TVs these days don't have s-video inputs) I didn't have any scientific way of measuring lag, but it seems like there might be a little bit. I do like that the device displays color bars when it doesn't detect a video source. Hopefully this will last me until I get my N64 Ultra HDMI, but if I would do it over again I would just spend a little more money and get a RetroTink 2X.
S**.
Works great with Atari Jaguar
Not many Amazon reviewers talking about Atari Jaguar with these S-Video converters, but I can confirm this Tendak works perfectly with my Jaguar and a 2014 Samsung Plasma TV. The video switch can toggle between 720p, 720i, 1080p and 1080i, which makes it versatile for various systems and TVs. For my purposes 720i is working just fine. The image is stretched in the sense that it fills up most of my TV screen, but I wouldn't call it 16:9 exactly... there is a little letterboxing going on, and most everything seems to be the right proportions. This makes me think the top or bottom of the image might be getting cropped, but I can't really tell. I've played a variety of Jaguar games - Rayman, Flashback, AvP - and everything looks good, whether the image is getting stretched or not. While nothing technically beats oldschool systems plugging into oldschool TVs, this is a great alternative for getting oldschool in the modern era.
K**D
S video superior
simplemente el S video te da un plus! la escogí porque puede cropear y sobretodo porque son 1080 i y p. el audio esta bien pero no lo uso, lo conecto aparta a una interface.
M**K
Converting various formats to HDMI
Like me, you may well have cupboards groaning under the weight of your old camcorder and VHS tapes. You might well have DVDs and Blu-rays that occupy metres of shelf space, and you may well be feeling that it’s high time they were all neatly compacted. There’s no time like the present. While you still have the ability and the hardware to replay those Mini DV, VHSc, S-VHS tapes and silver discs, it’s time to bring them all together into digital HDMI. Once you’ve converted your assorted mountain of tapes you can take a couple of Brave pills and clear out your drawers, drawers that are bursting with old camcorders, chargers, instruction books, spare batteries and the like. Your lumpy VHS (or V2000 or Betamax) recorder can be jettisoned, because all this ancient kit hasn’t got much life left in it now, has it? The Tendak Video Converter The Tendak black box weighs in at 173 gm, encased as it is by black aluminium alloy. You may find that your VCR, portable DVD player or camcorder only has composite (yellow for video, red and white for audio) outputs, and this is where the £30 Tendak converter box comes in. Even better if your player has S-Video out though, as this transfers a higher quality video signal. You plug in the Tendak’s power cable, connect your device using the front sockets, and the box will digitise (convert) the signal and send it forth through the HDMI socket. You can then view all your old tapes and DVDs on your modern TV, which these days will generally only accept HDMI or USB signals. Round the back of the Tendak box it gets more interesting. There’s the 5v power in socket followed by the operating LED. Next there’s a tiny button that toggles the innards to accept either the composite or the S-video input signal. Next, another toggle takes you sequentially through the HDMI’s output options, and you can choose to output at 480i, 480p, 720p, 1080i and 1080p. I can’t really see the point in outputting at less than the Full Monty resolution of 1920 x 1080 30p, as they all encode at 16 mbps and some of the settings default to a very jerky and unusable 15 fps. The 1280 x 720p outputs 60 fps video, but this isn’t going to make your original 25 fps footage look any smoother. As it’s a toggle switch, all the output settings are shown briefly on a connected monitor by the way. Next there’s an audio out socket, followed by the HDMI socket – which is video and audio together of course. My photo shows a set-up whereby I can play VHS or S-VHS tapes, full size or camcorder variety. I can also play MiniDV or HDV tapes, and while any of these are playing I can check to see all’s well on the connected 7’’ Feelworld monitor. Neither the camcorder nor the VHS deck has HDMI out, so their signals are sent through the Tendak, which upscales them to 1920 x 1080 and sends them via the supplied 17” long HDMI cable. Performance on test The Tendak video converter isn’t perfect, bit it’ll take in anything analogue and convert it to digital, though some of the settings stretch 4:3 out to 16:9. Sometimes video footage has very small blocks (like cine frames) running up the right hand side of the image, and some settings shift the image slightly over to the right, leaving a thin black bar down the left hand side. These small faults are easily corrected in an editing package should you feel the need to. If you don’t feel the need to, we can’t be friends. My Tendak is converting old camcorder tapes even as I write this, saving my memories for another day. Tom
B**M
Works amazing! A must-have!
Highly recommend! Will change your life!
A**A
Justo lo que necesitaba.
Este adaptador es justo lo que necesitaba para conectar un equipo sencillo de endoscopia con salida S- video a un monitor IPS. Muy contenta con la compra puesto que me permite usar monitores de alta definición a bajo costo. El único pero es que necesita estar bien conectado si no la calidad de la imagen baja e incluso puede verse en blanco y negro. Muy fácil de usar. Ojo, cuando conectes hay que apretar el botón de S-video, si no, no se envía la imagen.
M**N
Works great with my N64
Before I used this my N64 looked awful on my hdtv. Colours were washed out to the point of it not being playable. This converter has totally changed that. Colours pop out the screen now and the picture is sharper, although there's only so far it can take the N64. I'm connecting via s-video to hdmi and will try composite to hdmi for my ps2 & Xbox to see if it can work magic there. No idea why in the description it says they font recommend it for N64, it's worked wonders with mine. Recommended.
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