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Ultimarc ArcadeVGA PCI-E - Was I the only one who missed this?
Popcorrin:
Previously I used powerstrip with my med. resolution monitor and stretched all the games and to tell you the truth it didn't look all that bad. The only problem is that powerstrip doesn't work with all chipsets and it can be a pain to set up. I thought your card would take the work out of it. What med. resolutions does it support?
Lilwolf:
I think the issue is more that if your going to spend the money, you probably want 1-1 pixel as much as possible. Stretchign to a med resolution is probably better then stretching to a VGA, but you probably would rather get a standard resolution and stretch the med resolution games instead.
I was thinking about the monitors that are both standard, med and vga would be amazing.... but don't these require some dip switch changes to go between standard / med resolution? Don't have one so never played with it.
krick:
--- Quote from: Lilwolf on August 08, 2006, 10:09:30 am ---
I was thinking about the monitors that are both standard, med and vga would be amazing.
--- End quote ---
You've just described the Wells-Gardner D9200. It's a 15/25/31KHz tri-sync monitor.
ahofle:
I hope someone puts up some comparison pictures of LCDs, PC monitors, and arcade monitors before and after the new arcadeVGA is hooked up. I'm not really understanding how the LCD/PC CRT image can look 'better' if it has perfectly-edged blocks. Is this any different than the image if you turned off hardware stretch? I think the blurred hardware stretch looks better on those types of displays personally (but not on real arcade monitors or TVs of course).
horseboy:
So, will this thing work with a TV?