![how to setup elgato hd60 pro how to setup elgato hd60 pro](https://help.elgato.com/hc/article_attachments/360043022452/2019-11-13_21_17_02-Create_Select_Source.png)
Definitely much cheaper than getting another unit all together. One to go from the PS3 to the splitter, one to go from the splitter to your monitor/TV, and one to go to from the splitter to your capture card.
#How to setup elgato hd60 pro pro#
So all you really need to get it to work with your HD60 Pro is one HDMI splitter and three HDMI cables. 2) Plug the other end of this cable into the HDMI IN port of the Elgato Game Capture HD60 Pro. I picked up this model on Amazon, and that bypasses the HDCP encryption perfectly. TV or monitor Setup Steps 1) Plug one end of an HDMI Cable into the HDMI OUT port of the desktop PCs graphics card. Unfortunately I have an Elgato HD60 Pro which only supports HDMI, and I was not going to invest in yet another capture device, especially since I don’t really use it much anymore thanks to AMD’s AVC Encoder in OBS Studio.īut I didn’t give up! I found out through continued research that using an HDMI splitter would do the trick just fine (as seen above), but not all HDMI splitters will do the job. But upon researching I found that could be problematic as the console has HDCP encryption preventing you from streaming or recording to an external device unless you record via composite. I tend to stick to emulators still, like with Klonoa for example, but you never know… it could come in handy.Īfter getting my hands on it I was interested in the idea of possibly streaming gameplay on the rare chance something like that could happen. I figured for that kind of money it would be worth grabbing it to play games that never quite made it to any other platform, plus it’s a first generation PS3 capable of playing games going back to the PS2 and PS1. Last year I acquired a PS3 for $10 this included two controllers and their cables, two HDMI cables, and a copy of GTA4 I’ll never use.