
It does chop a tiny bit off the top an bottom, but oddly at least for my eyes and TV, the picture doesn't look stretched.Īnyway, don't know if that is possible or will work for you, but is how I kinda get around the problem. An having it in the remote makes it pretty easy to switch this around. Is there a way to force a 16:9 aspect ratio All drivers show as up-to-date and I cannot find a way to do this in Windows 10. But then on the LED, I just stretch it with the option on the TV and for some reason, it actually normally doesn't look that bad. I tried to change the resolution but the only alternative selection available used a 4:3 aspect ratio. So essentially I do the recode just as it is with using Loose and anamorphic 2, an this produces the 4:3 aspect as would be suspected, which all in all kinda works nice for my CRT-TV's. So like others said, is going to be the way.īut really what I wanted to reply was.as I have been doing a lot of older 4:3 DVD's to play on my LED TV, like many of these have, my TV has a aspect adjustment that I programmed the switching of into the remote.



Yeah I can tell you at least for me as I was actually looking for the opposite, where for me I was looking to take Blu-Rays and make them fill up a 4:3 CRT-TV better.īut all in all I was hoping not to loose any of the pixel count, (not that it really mattered, but hey I paid for it).Īnyway, what I finally found was I cropped 200 points on each side from the width, and it did help some.īut for sure I lost some of the picture too.
