Forum Discussion
Yes, the last Roku to have composite video came out in 2017.
I thought I was a hold-out by not upgrading to HD and HDMI until 2008. Once I did, I wondered why I waited so long. However, there are gadgets on amazon, ebay etc. that can do conversions such as HDMI to composite video. I think that would probably be better than trying to find a Roku old enough to have composite video, yet new enough to be supported for years to come.
Found this HDMI to RF Coax converter:
...would solve the problem if it works. Does anyone have any experience with this or other HDMI-RF converter?
- Strega22 years agoRoku Guru
Hah! I just noticed that one of the pictures for the RF device shows a Roku home screen on a TV with knobs and rabbit ears! Cute! And one of the channels on the home screen is 4K spotlight! đ
Is RF what you want? Because thatâs generally considered âeven worseâ than composite. I was thinking more like this.
However, I have no experience with that particular device â just something I found.
- DavidPotomac2 years agoChannel Surfer
Thanks again. Yes, need RF if we are going to keep using this very old TV, because that's the only thing it takes. (I have an adapter for RCA to RF that seems to work just fine) The old TV has advantage that it has a built-in VHS player, and there are still a fair number of VHS tapes that never made it to DVD. Also fits the space it's in.
I guess we'll need to try HDMI to RF and either live w/mediocre display or get different TV.
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