




🎥 Preserve the past, stream in style — upgrade your vintage video game!
The StarTech.com VID2HDCON2 is a robust analog-to-HDMI converter that upscales S-Video or composite inputs to 720p HDMI output, supporting both NTSC and PAL formats. Designed for plug-and-play ease with no software installation, it integrates stereo RCA audio into a single HDMI stream. Ideal for professionals and enthusiasts looking to preserve legacy media with reliable, high-quality video and audio conversion.




| ASIN | B00TTQ5RZY |
| Best Sellers Rank | #322 in Video Converters |
| Brand | StarTech |
| Built-In Media | Cable |
| Color | Black |
| Compatible Devices | Monitor, Television |
| Connector Type | HDMI, RCA |
| Current Rating | 0.8 Amps |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 out of 5 stars 46 Reviews |
| Finish | Hdmi |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00065030882620 |
| Input Voltage | 5 Volts |
| Item Dimensions | 6.1 x 3 x 0.9 inches |
| Item Height | 0.9 inches |
| Item Type Name | Video Display Connectivity |
| Item Weight | 8.8 ounces |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 6.1 x 3 x 0.9 inches |
| Manufacturer | StarTech.com |
| Model Number | VID2HDCON2 |
| Number of Items | 1 |
| Number of Ports | 1 |
| Package Quantity | 1 |
| Power Plug Type | Type A - 2 pin (North American) |
| Specific Uses For Product | Monitor |
| UPC | 065030882620 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Warranty Description | 2 Years |
| Warranty Type | Lifetime |
M**S
Very solid performance for analog conversion
I have been searching for options to convert old family videos from VHS to digital and have settled on this Startech unit. Short answer; it's a very well made unit that performs the task well. My other attempts involved several other devices and methods. First one was a Dazzle Hollywood DV Bridge. That device takes composite video and converts it to a DV stream on fire-wire. I captured the stream with either Adobe Premiere (Elements) or Virtual Dub. Overall video quality was decent but not quite as good as the original VHS played directly to a TV. Also, finicky and sometimes returns an error and the recording dies. Also, several artifacts that appear such as image-tearing along the top or bottom of screen. Also tried a Diamond VC500 (composite video to USB), capturing with Cyberlink. Same issues as the DV bridge and very visible loss of quality, including pixelation. Also had problems with audio not staying in sync with the video. I've also tried DVD recorders. They are stable but also did not produce a quality that matched the original source. I also tried a budget HDMI upscaler (little square box, about $30 on Amazon) but the image quality was horrible. Enter the Startech: I bought it in part based on my experience with other devices made by them that performed very well. I am not disappointed with this device. Very solidly built metal case and high quality receptacles, etc. It will take either composite or S-Video input. I am using the composite. I send the HDMI output to an AGPtEk HDMI capture device (model VG0020?). The AGPtEK is dumping directly to a USB thumb drive. The main benefit of this Startech is that it seems to be absolutely reliable; NEVER dropping out due to any bad sync pulses or other timing issues related to the source. Also, absolutely none of the tearing or other distortion artifacts I experienced with the other methods. Also, no visible pixelation at all in the resulting file. My 60 year old eyes judge the overall quality as nearly equal to the VHS playing directly to a TV. Never have any audio/video sync issues. The resulting files are quite large (I am using a 128 GB thumb drive). Your 4:3 aspect ratio video will end up stretched horizontally. No problem; I can easily "interpret footage" within Adobe to easily convert back to 4:3 ratio.
M**S
Yes It is Better - Used with Sony Hi8 Camera and Tapes
I purchased to watch 20 to 25 years old Hi8 tapes from a Sony Handicam using S-Video. Works great. The picture was well converted and even (color and rendering) across the whole screen. I reviewed video from indoors and outdoors under a range of recording light conditions (poor to great). As near as I can personally tell, the converter represented the video as good (or as bad) as the tape originally played back on the TV. Couple of Notes: 1. Image is stretched from 4:3. My TV has a setting to fix this. Looked perfect after changing the TV. 2. Color as good as I can expect - better than I imagined. It is not great in some lighting conditions recorded on tape and perfectly fine for other tapes recorded outdoors on sunny day. This is the camera and tape recordings from 25 years ago; not the S-Video to HDMI converter. Also remember old tube color TVs typically had strong brightness and color saturation to make video look better than what was really recorded. 3. Easy to use - just plugged in S-Video and L/R audio, turned it on and it worked. (Does not come with cables.) 4. Audio is coming across as stereo. The Handicam was a stereo camera and the converted kept it stereo all the way to the TV. 5. I am not sure the TV's processor is compensating although I can't rule it out. So, what I see is what is actually being converted from S-Video. Meaning? The converter is doing its job and the TV is not picking up the slack or masking quality issues. I was concerned at three times the cost money would be needlessly spent. I'm not now.
L**E
Way better than the cheaper options for digitization of magnetic tape media
I've spent a lot of time trying to find some modern tech that does a decent job of digitizing vhs, hi8, miniDV, etc. While this still doesn't quite reach the quality of the old stuff that was specifically designed for analog video (hello ATI TV Wonder 600 USB), it's dang near good enough when combined with a high-quality capture card. It's definitely miles and miles ahead of all the cheaper square-shaped mass-produced units you can find on Amazon under a hundred different brand names. Super video nerds will still notice a bit of digital artifacting, mostly with very low-light footage or black-ish gradients, and as far as I can tell it only upscales to 16:9 resolution with no 4:3 option, but you can fix most of that with a bit of touch-up during post-processing. If you need an upscaler and you care about the image quality of your captures or your retro-gaming, this is good. Costs more than the others, but you get what you pay for.
T**2
Bicubic vs bilinear interpolation aside, this is great
The $20 cheapie brands of converters strip out fields (e.g. Pac-Man on the Atari 800 computer). This Star Tech device doesn't strip out fields and provides a very good picture. For cost/performance average, this is my first go-to brand. My only gripe is that it uses something like bicubic interpolation instead of bilinear, which results in a ghostlike artifact in the contrasting areas of text. It's not bad and is only a minor gripe, and IMHO a positive of this is some softness that doesn't look overtly overly sharp. It grew on me and, back in the day of TV and CRT monitors, the blockiness wasn't pinpoint sharp either. If you want something so sharp, whip out the soldering iron and modify your retro console or computer with a third party kit. This device is less risky for most of us, especially me. :)
R**E
YES! A+++++
Running S-Video from a Panasonic VCR through a Yamaha RX-A8A home theater amp to a 65-inch screen. It WORKS! Bought another box from Amazon for half this price. It did not work at all. Returned it. This unit is solid and hefty with a power switch and indicator lights to show which channels are active. Sharp clear 1.33:1 images fill the 16:9 screen wall to wall. Videos more than 30 years old have never looked better.
T**O
Horrible Video Quality Compared to VID2HDCON
Connected this to a Sony SVHS VCR and a 4k TV. Video was smeary, dull, and juddery. These artifacts were not due to image processing on the TV. I replaced this with Startech VID2HDCON, and the issues disappeared. For the price of $90 the image quality is extremely disappointing. Buy the VID2HDCON for a few dollars more instead.
C**O
Outstanding VHS tape to HDMI converter
Outstanding VHS tape to HDMI converter. While a little pricey, this converter gives a clean converted image and does not leave a red band across the top of the image or distort colors like other less expensive converters/upscalers. If you want to convert your tapes to digital, this the the converter you want for high quality digital images. Note: You will also need a video capture device (like the Elgato Cam Link 4K) to save the digital file to your computer or cloud. I used this combo to convert all of my home videos.
J**R
Great image quality
After trying many convertors, glad I finally found this one. This product delivers great image quality and signal is totally steady
Trustpilot
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