So the same TV I made a thread about a little while ago asking about universal chassis compatibility - go check that thread out for the TV particulars. Don't worry, you won't have to search far.
I've done some googling and there's a few vague guides online talking about hacking an RGB input into an NTSC tv. However, there's scant details on exactly how to achieve this. One guy fed his signal into the OSD pins on his TV's video processor, and it turned out ok-ish.
Anyway, on my television, I've located on the board an empty component input - as in, there is a spot there to wire in a connector, but there is no connector. Now I've read that possibly the component input of the chip may actually be disabled in its ROM as it wasn't standard on the model TV I've got, so it was turned off in a way that the end-user can't undo.
I know from experience that the S-video input on this TV isn't too bad, as far as they go, but honestly, I'd like to get the most out of the tube as possible if I can't just stick a unichassis on it. I'm aware it'll involve soldering, desoldering, possible rewiring, addition of resistors, etc. That's fine, I don't expect this to be "simple", but definitely something that's achievable with a bit of work.
Now from what I can determine, the input voltage for signals is a flat 1V on this TV. I know that most VGA cards these days output 1V signals. Would I be able to sever the RGB lines that feed the guns from the TV board, and connect them directly to a signal outputted from a VGA card? As long as I have something plugged into composite or Svideo on the back, it should just use the sync signals from that, yeah?
I've got the relevant service manuals with schematics of all the boards (that's how I managed to locate the unused component input) and can take as many photos as needed to make this more easily answered. And if it turns out I'm stuck with S-video then that's fine too. I'd just like to know one way or another if it can be done with relative simplicity.