
REVIEW 1:
Today we are having a look at a cheap SIMPLECOM CM201 VGA to HDMI Converter I bought from MSY.
It is Available for $16 from MSY Australia.
Link:
http://www.msy.com.au/pc-accessories/17 ... erter.html
I purchased this for the sole purpose of Capturing Dreamcast footage to one of the many Gaming Capture devices available, none of the affordable ones offer VGA.
The package:
Standard fare for cheap cables, nothing special at all.
The Contents:
you get the Converter itself. 6cm wide by 5.5cm depth by 2cm height.
A 25cm Male to Male VGA cable
A 60 cm Male to Male 3.5mm Stereo audio cable
A 65 cm USB A Male to Mini B Male cable for power (so 5 volts)
Warranty Card (Comes with 1 year)
User manual (with some great Engrish included)
The Unit:
Comes pre scratched right from the packet, But it's almost invisible to the naked eye under normal light.
The inputs:
Female VGA and a Female 3.5mm Stereo audio jack
The Output:
Single Gold Plated Female HDMI port. Supports HDMI version 1.0, 1.1, 1.2 and 1.3. Says it supports HDCP 1.2 (I didn't test that)
The POWER:
Single Female Mini USB B port.
Manual Says it has a power light that doesn't exist, USB standard 5V, 600MH. I was able to power it from the front panel of my Computer, and also from the USB port on my TV
Technical Parameters:
Shown here are the claimed specs, including the 'Input Resolutian' 'HDMI output suppart' 'Audio output inlerface' 'amplifier or hadset' and of course the all important 'pOWER INPUT INTEACE'
We're finally ready to Hook it all up.
All of the included ports and Cables fit perfectly, nothing to note about the physical build quality of the device. It all works with other cables and fits all standards of my test equipment.
What was used for testing:
A PAL Sega Dreamcast. running original release Crazy Taxi.
A Genuine Sega Dreamcast VGA adapter.
An Akai 39.5" Full HD LED TV Model AK4020FHD
Genuine Microsoft Xbox HDMI cable
Fujifilm Finepix S5800
Product photos: Auto, Flash on, Macro on.
Footage photos: Auto, Flash off.
The control conditions:
TV was set to standard picture settings, with a forced aspect ratio of 4:3 for both sets of tests. First I played for a while with Bare VGA using a Generic, good quality VGA cable, then I switched to the Simplecom and continued playing.
A note on my Game choice:
Crazy taxi is not the most visually, nor technically impressive Dreamcast game there is (I'll get to Soul Calibur, Shenmue 1 and 2 and more later when I capture footage) But it's the game I am most Familiar with. I have spent COUNTLESS hours playing this game since 2000, both in arcades and the Dreamcast, I know what the game is supposed to look, sound and play like on many forms of display (CRT, LCD, LED, Projectors, Rear projection TVs) and have played it with pretty much every connection known to the Dreamcast (Composite, S-video, RF and VGA) So I was looking out for any weaknesses in this $16 adaptor I could find, especially motion blurring, tearing and off colours.
OK, FINALLY, let's get to some comparison shots and the test, IT'S ABOUT DAMN TIME!!
Dreamcast menu on Bare VGA:
Dreamcast menu on HDMI:
From the Menu, I observed little difference in clarity and colour on still backgrounds between both tests. something about the blacks on the HDMI seemed a little different.
Close up of menu on Bare VGA:
Close up of menu on HDMI:
Looking a little closer, we can see that shades of dark grey are rendered darker, Not quite pitch black, there is still some shades of grey, they are just a lot darker. Excuse Quality of photo, Quality of both units is comprable, my shitty photography skills make HDMI look HORRIBLE when it isn't
Title screen of Crazy Taxi on Bare VGA:
Title screen of Crazy Taxi on HDMI:
On the Title screen, Things were much closer, Colours and Clarity in both tests were great with the HDMI making things a tiny bit more colour saturated.
(Difference seems bigger thanks to my horrible photo skills, they are really close)
Demo/Press Start Screen on Bare VGA:
Demo/Press Start Screen on HDMI:
Capturing these photos was the hardest part of this test.. Many photos were taken, all of them useless, this was the closest I could get on each, It's a very fast moving demo, and doesn't translate to a photo well. The blurry backgrounds aren't visible in actual game play on either VGA or HDMI
Gameplay on Bare VGA:
Gameplay on HDMI:
This shot sums up the experience very nicely, at first glance you would be forgiven for thinking these photos were taken in the same session 1 second apart. Nope, The totals Earned don't add up, and if you zoom in you can see the previously mentioned dark colours being slightly darker.
Credits on Bare VGA:
Credits on HDMI:
And here is the full effect of the black differences, When the credits roll, you can see all the lines where the HDMI adapter makes blacks weird.
In summary:
I am very impressed with the quality of the SIMPLECOM CM201 VGA to HDMI adaptor. Motion is smooth, colours are accurate and although it won't be too useful for gaming for most people, as off the top of my head only the Dreamcast and Xbox 360 ever used VGA, it could be a useful tool for capturing Retro PC footage with modern capture devices without having to shell out hundreds for a dedicated VGA capture card.
As for the gaming use, it will be perfect for capturing what I need it to. Dreamcast games, I look forward to seeing how it handles some of the darker parts of Shenmue and Grandia 2. Racing games will all be perfectly fine, when I was playing Crazy Taxi, I would have been hard pressed to know I was actually using the adaptor, Night races of Metropolis Street Racer may be a bit odd, with the blacks being a little funny, but for $16 I'm not going to complain.
Please forgive my shitty photography skills, and lack of ability to show the video (Capture card coming soon)
Written and compiled by FIREWIRE1394 for
BLUEGUERILLA:
http://www.bg.blueguerilla.org/
and
Overclockers Australia:
http://forums.overclockers.com.au/
Please feel free to Share or use any of this Unboxing / Review / Tech Sheet / Ad etc as you see fit, But Don't be a dick and claim credit for any of it.
Cheers.

TLDR:
Colours and Motion are spot on.
Greys are turned darker, and black gets patchy.
Would be good for Retro PC's, none of this Fancy DVI, DP, HDMI back then!
Well made unit and cables, BYO HDMI cable.
1 year warranty
For $16 it's great. I'd have been happy at $25-30.
Zoidy, Feel free to move into retro gaming or Tech thread if this doesn't deserve it's own topic.
(if it stays as it's own thread, I'll update when I get a capture device and go for the Crazy Taxi Record)
Edit, yeah it can stay as it's own thread, I'm gonna use it to review more cheap tech shit!!

Stay tuned for Review 2!