I got a chance tonight to mess with that 100deg 26" tube (A66AAM03X) and an 8liners chassis. When I first powered it up it was out of convergence pretty badly. After messing around for about a half hour with the rings, I was able to dial it in pretty good statically. I didn't want to get into messing with the yoke & wedges tonite. There is one corner that is still out just a bit. I see it mostly because I know it's there, I guess, but I doubt the average person would notice it during a game.
Anyway... Victor's 25" chassis has tons of adjustment, and the pincushion pot is a lifesaver! It has quite a bit of range, too. I can get about an inch of both concave & convex horizontal screen adjustment with it. I've found that this chassis is quite a bit more flexible than the 19" version with more adjustments available. On the main chassis itself there is a B+, B. limiter (not sure what this does exactly), pincushion, and V. Line adjustment pots. The remote board has the rest of the usual pots: Hor size & position, Ver size & position, brightness, contrast, Ver & Hor hold.
One thing I found with a couple game boards (Time Pilot w/ jamma adapter & Skins golf) is that the monitor displays a "hula" wave, but I was able to nearly eliminate that by adjusting the B+ and B. Limiter pots, but not entirely. I didn't see a wave with either a Wrestlefest or Guerrilla War board, though.
Here are a couple quick pics I took tonight:






Overall, I'm pretty impressed with this chassis considering that I wasn't expecting a whole lot because of the 100deg tube. This particular combo is definitely usable in a game, which is what I plan to do with it, so that's good... This is an extremely affordable option for a 25"+ arcade monitor that only costs $100, assuming you can pick up a compatible TV tube for free.
