The HDMI Amplifier Splitter allows two HDMI devices to be switched easily into some HDTV HDMI compatible monitors or projectors. Simply connect your HDTV displays to the Splitter’s display outputs. The HDMI Splitter can also be placed at the end of a long HDMI cable to regenerate the HDMI signal. The HDMI Amplifier Splitter offers solutions for HDTV retail and show site, HDTV, STB, DVD and Projector factory, noise space and security concerns, data center control, information distribution, conference room presentation, school and corporate training environments.
- Easy to Use: Install in seconds, no need for setting
- Switching: Inputs could be switched between two HDMI Source
- Supports the Video Amplifier Bandwidth up to 2.25Gpbs/225MHz
- Stackable (Daisy chained): Large distribution achieved by stacking the HDMI Amplifier Splitter
- HDCP compliant. FCC CE Certified, RoHS compliant.
|
Signal Inputs/Output
|
|
|
Input Video Signal
|
0.5-1.0 volts p-p
|
|
Input DDC Signal
|
5 volts p-p (TTL)
|
|
Video Amplifier Bandwidth
|
2.25Gbps/225MHz
|
|
Vertical Frequency Range
|
60Hz
|
|
Digital Signal I/O
|
|
|
HDMI Compliance
|
HDMI 1.3b
|
|
Resolutions(HDTV)
|
|
|
Interlaced(50&60Hz)
|
480i,576i,1080i
|
|
Progressive(50&60Hz)
|
480p,576p,720p,1080p
|
|
Mechanical
|
|
|
Size(W-H-D)
|
|
|
Weight(Net)
|
|
|
Warranty
|
|
|
Limited Warranty
|
1 Year Parts and Labor
|
|
Environmental
|
|
|
Operating Temperature
|
0? to +70?
|
|
Operating Humidity
|
10% to 80 % RH (no condensation)
|
|
Storage Temperature
|
-10? to +80?
|
|
Storage Humidity
|
5% to 90 % RH (no condensation)
|
|
Power Requirement
|
|
|
External Power Supply
|
5V DC@2*4(2.5A);2*8(3A)
|
|
Power Consumption
|
15 Watts (max.)
|
|
Regulatory Approvals
|
|
|
Converter Unit
|
FCC,CE,UL
|
|
Power Supply
|
UL,CE,FCC
|
Due to the current state of the technology, results using HDMI and/or DVI splitters can be mixed. Especially splitters which reply on the individual devices ability to negotiate a 3 way handshake. The problem is not all devices are programmed to deal with this properly and will sometimes default to an HDCP error state. To put it simply, some devices will consider a split of the signal to be a copyright violation, so it may decide that only one display should show at a time or may block the content entirely. This type of situation is considered to be a device compatibility issue and cannot be fixed short of a firmware update by the individual device manufacturers.