Rankie 1080P Active HDTV HDMI to VGA Adapter (Male to Female) Converter with Audio for PC, Monitor, Projector, HDTV, Xbox and more
$11.99
In stock, Ship to United States only
Description
The lightweight and portable HDMI to VGA adapter connects an HDMI compatible device to a monitor or projector with VGA port; A VGA cable (sold separately) is required
Built-in active IC chip improves compatibility. Included Micro-USB cable provides additional power for devices with low-power output port such as MacBook Pro with Retina Display
The HDMI to VGA converter supports resolutions up to 1920×1080 (1080p Full HD) including 720p and 1600×1200 for HD monitors or projectors
Gold-plated connectors resist corrosion, provide rigidity, and improve the signal performance. 4″ short cable relieves strain and protects HDMI port on your device
The HDMI VGA converter is compatible with desktop, laptop, Ultrabook, notebook, Intel Nuc, Macbook Pro, Raspberry Pi, Chromebook, Apple TV, Roku streaming media player, cable box, or other devices with HDMI port
Amazin Customer –
Does its job just fine
J Berry –
Good value. easy setup & it works – needed quickly for presentation to get around damaged VGA port on laptop and hard to access projector cabled for VGA. Arrived promptly & worked without any fuss. A good bit of kit.
AT –
Works fine – simple to use
Susan –
This will allow the functionality that we need. Perfect. thank you.
Waga –
Dropped a star due to needing a USB port to power it. which I didn’t realise
Jenna Hughes –
Needed this as got a new computer that didn’t have the port that I needed for a second screen. This works well. no issues and was a great price.
AT –
Good quality and did the job.
Fran?ois –
Works as advertised on MOST computers. but not all.
Guy –
I bought two of these as I still have a number of VGA monitors including two very high end CRTs. I first tried an adapter with a 1280×1024 LCD monitor – it worked perfectly. Then I tried it with a CRT. I use Linux (Mint 19) and was disappointed to find I was only offered 1280×1024 @ 85 Hz or 1920 x 1080 at a useless 60 Hz (the monitors will do 2048×1536 @ 75 Hz but I knew the RAMDAC in the adapter wouldn”t get anywhere near that.) I suspected the problem was the nVidia video card driver – it so often is – and I added a line to the /etc/X11/xorg.conf file Device Section – Option “ModeValidation” “AllowNonEdidModes”. After which I was offered 1400×1050 @ 75 Hz which was perfectly acceptable. So a very good result for a very inexpensive price.
David –
Everything connects and appreciate the extra cables to connect MAC.