heya,
yeah thats pretty much correct.
I was told that this was the type of cable I should buy....and Keene were meant to make it up to this spec
http://ryoandr.free.fr/english.htmlIt was exactly the same as that cable, however where you see the resistor on the scart end, that brown wire was on the wrong side of the resistor which was the first main error causing problems.
The second problem, yep, was that, as to the diagram, the Vsync is not wired up at all, which is why I was scratching my head for ages trying to get the bugger to work. So I basically soldered a join (or u could make a wire - prob better to be honest

) from pin 14 to pin 13 (both on the vga connector side) in order to have both of them connected to pin 20 on the scart. Why on earth the cables made don't seem to have a vsync is beyond me. do some tv's work fine without a vsync? I wouldn't have thought so... :|
The only problem that having the wire on the wrong side of the resistor was causing the Philips tv not to be able to show the screen...the other 2 tv's were fine.
It was on this site,
http://www.idiots.org.uk/vga_rgb_scart/index.html , where it talks about "Scart Control Signals", and this sentence "Some newer TVs seem to be able to detect if an RGB input is being applied to the SCART socket without this signal being set correctly, so you may not need it.
", that I thought the wiring may have had something to do with it even though that refers to powering it from the pc power supply, so I swapped it round again to the CORRECT wire on the scart side and it now works spot on.
When I get time, (hard with a 7month baby), I'm going to get a homemade cable made up, and try it without a resistor on there, to see if its even needed at all, as the various different guides, a lot dont even have one on there. ok so its onliky 10p to add a resistor to the cable but no point if no need
