Main > Monitor/Video Forum |
crt tv rgb input |
<< < (6/7) > >> |
apfelanni:
there are 2 versions of the grundig 410 reference . one comes with vga input per factory default , the other without the modul . its a solid top class 100 hertz tv with a very good picture and speakers. the chassis is huge and devided into 2 parts , what makes mounting into some cabinets not that easy. the tube is a nice curved toshiba . i recommend to use it with the vga input and not with mamescart . i m not sure if the vga - scart adapter works on this tv set. if it comes to retrogaming and mamescart ure better up with a 50-60 hertz tv. i bought a reference 410 as monitor replacement for my naomi . because the tube is curved it didnt fit the flat bezel of my virtua striker naomi . so i went with a xentia mf 490 instead ( flat toshiba with vga input ) and replaced moms 20 year old tv with the reference 410 . she is so pleased with it that she wont give it away anymore ( not to mention it perfectly fits with her furniture). |
mahalos:
--- Quote from: Jack Burton on June 22, 2011, 03:06:18 am ---Have you tried any 31.5khz games on the TV yet? I'm kind of curious to know how they looked. Any Atomiswave or Naomi game like Hokuto No Ken or Guilty Gear should look incredible. --- End quote --- Haven't tried any of these yet, I got side tracked today after remembering my Grundig had a VGA port, so have been playing around with that....I must say, I'm really impressed with the picture, the games look fantastic. The geometry is a little out (curved inwards on the sides) the user menu only has adjustment for horizontal and vertical, but i'm hoping the service menu might have the same sort of parabola adjustment the Panasonic set had. I'm really really stoked with the quality of picture, I'll be over the moon if i can sort out the TV's to start up on the VGA inputs. |
apfelanni:
autostart av5 / vga for cabinet use : keep the power button pressed and switch on cabinet power . the tv remembers the latest used channel . the osd service ( code 8500 ) offers a wide range of adjustments . the vga port handles 3 different resolutions / refreshrates. |
BurgerKingDiamond:
--- Quote from: Jack Burton on June 15, 2011, 01:15:47 am ---There's no such thing as a 27" tube. It's just different measuring systems. Televisions are often measured by their visible viewing distance, while monitors are measured by the size of the actual tube. Do to the bezel surrounding the television screen you can only see 27" of video. However, the tube inside is probably nearly the exact same size as your grundig tv. You have a dilemma on your hands here. There's quite a few good fighting games for both 15 and 31khz monitors. I say get them both. :) Also, VGA is RGB. RGB isn't really a video standard of it's own. It comes in a variety of designs like RGBS, RGBHV, RGsB, SCART, CGA, VGA, CMPTR, etc. The actual difference in video quality between them is mostly negligible. It's all a matter of getting the right cables and adapters to get video from the device to the display. In the case of the RGB 31.5khz connector, you've got it just about as good as it gets. A regular ol' VGA cable is all you need. --- End quote --- maybe you can explain this to me. I have computer monitor I got on craigslist that has a regular VGA input and also RCA jacks for RGB. It came with a cable the has a VGA plug that goes into the PC VGA port and breaks out into the RGB RCA plugs that go into the monitor. If VGA and RGB are the same then why does this have both? What's the point? |
BurgerKingDiamond:
I guess it's just 2 choices of how you want to connect based on what cable you have. It seems kind of pointless because regular VGA cables are common. I've never seen one that breaks out into the 5 plugs before. http://www.dll.com.mx/biblioteca/Monitors/Viewsonic/P815%20Specs.pdf |
Navigation |
Message Index |
Next page |
Previous page |