1st issue. I am convinced something is up with the EDID Emulation when sending the signal through, what you are calling the offset is identical on the monitor and the TV, what has me convinced of this is with the new Chinese adapter I got today I hooked that up to the Panasonic ran the signal through and it displays just fine but the image is offset identical on that one as to the monitor and the other CRT and even more to a degree. Why do I believe this offset is an issue? Well in the first images I showed early on getting the signal through the TV displayed the entire image of the desktop with the Task bar fully visible. So I'm guess with all my playing around with Arcade OSD and CRT_Emulator I messed something up. I get that the EDID emulation isn't the "important" part but you don't get a signal unless its turned on.
Errr...., "offset" is your term, the only time I've used the word here was regarding PCB offset feet which are used to physically screw down a GreenAntz unit.
As you've discovered, EDID emulation either works or it doesn't. It has nothing to do with your overscan issues. If it ain't broke leave it alone. I recall someone saying somewhere that every time you click EDID emulation on/off, you should re-generate and re-install the video modes. So keep that in mind.
2nd issue is with colors, maybe you might have an idea what it means, I discovered today with the SHARP that the Green shows sometimes for some things but is missing in allot of other things and I almost believe if this issue is fixed that would be the end of most everything
In your expert opinion what does that mean? Or What would be the root cause of that?
Yeah, your Sharp TV definitely lacks green, though not completely. Seems to be absent entirely at lower levels. However it seems to be present if the signal is strong enough. Which is why I think about RGB (green) cutoffs (not offsets, presets or porches...).
Does the Sharp TV lack green with other inputs? If so, maybe there is an issue with the green drive circuit or the cathode in the tube itself.
Another possibility is that with S-video (& YPbPr), the Y signal carries both sync and luma. Luma mostly concerns brightness, but is also important for determining green in particular. If you are putting sync in via composite/AV input, and there is no resistor on it, then it could possibly be swamping the green.
To explain... sync signal is simply "ON" most of the time. Sync pulse is triggered by low-active state, a lack of voltage. Sync is carried on the Y (luma), which also includes picture information. By running the sync in from VGA at 5v, you're essentially blasting luma at more than max into the TV, through an AV input designed for 1v max. Of that, the actual sync part of that signal is only meant to be 0.3v max.
This is why I go on about the resistor on sync. This is really the bare minimum.
(If it was me, I'd also use a Schottky diode (IN58XX, reverse biased, cathode to signal, anode to GND) to CLAMP the sync to GND. A second schottky diode, in the opposite to orientation (forward biased), would then limit the sync to approximately 0.3v max. This is CLAMPING, it just keeps sync within normal range and makes it easier to for the TV to work out which is what. I've harped on about this more than I've wanted to. Please show me more pics!)
Anyways, the jungle blanks AV input (except the sync) when the OSD is active (that's why they call it a "blanking" signal), so I'm entertaining a hypothesis that the jungle is blanking a field of green, and that somehow means you have little green for your RGB OSD mod. Easiest way to test this theory would be to disconnect the blanking voltage and see what kind of image you get - if you see a bright screen, either white or greenish, then that could be the problem.
Another cause could include the Ultimarc amp (if it isn't boosting green as much), but this seems unlikely.
You mentioned to go checkout the RGB cuttoffs, I got the service manual and studied it a bit, and found out how to get into the service menu. Here in the service menu I have these particular options:


I highlighted the most obvious, but which one of those would be the cutoffs?
You'll have to experiment for yourself. Every TV is different, and each manufacturer seems to use different terms, so I can't be certain. All I could really do is make educated guesses.
XXX_BIAS are likely equivalent to "gain", concerning colour brightness. XXX_DRIVE might be colour intensity, but it also might concern the cutoffs (minimums) I mentioned. Sometimes I see the cutoffs listed as "RC", "BC", "GC".
You should also look out at settings like "YC", which probably concerns a balance between Y (luma, brightness & sync) and C (chroma, colour).
H_BLK_R and H_BLK_L may be for tweaking the horizontal position.
BS_START and BS_GAIN sound like they could be worth adjusting, but I'm not sure what they might be for.
I wonder what R/B_ANGLE is about, whether it concerns the colour mix.
Leave settings like TINT, CONTRAST, COLOR, BRIGHTNESS at neutral settings, at least until you've bedded down your setup a bit.
SHARPNESS should be set to zero (00) or a neutral setting. Go with 00. It is for making crap TV or VCR signals look less crap - doesn't do anything useful for RGB or component inputs.
You may have other pages of service mode adjustments - my China TV has 20 pages! Most are not accessible without entering more service mode codes.