Well, after months of planning and preparation, I finally got my hands on a brand new 19" CRT monitor. It's a Neotec, model NT-1000, built in April 2010. One of their last CRT models to be made. No isolation transformer needed.
Last night I plugged it in, hooked it up to my new ArcadeVGA card, and flipped the switch on my surge protector. I was greeted with a blank screen, a moment or two of silence, and then 10 seconds of a constant, loud, medium-pitched "screetching/nails-on-the-chalkboard/static/white noise" sound. I panicked and switched everything off.
I tried it again today, same thing. The room was much darker this time, though, and I noticed the CRT neck was not emitting a constant soft glow (like a traditional light bulb), but furiously sparking. As I sat and watched the pretty light show, it became obvious that the sparking lights in the neck were making the sound. It was like little bolts of lightning, but instead of moving randomly, they were all moving in the same, straight direction. I let it go for about 30 seconds - the sound never stopped, and I never got a picture of any kind. Also, my keyboard's lights flashed on and off the whole time. No beeps from the motherboard, though.
My theory is that the electric current is not even getting into the CRT itself, because there is absolutely no change in the front of the monitor during this whole process. You know the sounds a typical old TV makes when it starts up, even if there's no image, you can tell that it's on? I'm not getting that. Just the sparking/scratching sound from the neck.
I made up my own molex connectors for the power and the video signal cables on the monitor side. I followed Andy's diagram on Ultimarc's website to make my own VGA breakout cable.
Any ideas? Has anyone experienced this? It's a brand new monitor, so I'm really disappointed.