Hi all
I am just starting building my first cab and have decided to go for a TV for the display due to cost. I have been reading through these message boards trying to decipher what other users have been using and I've noticed that some folk have opted for a SCART TV using a VGA to SCART cable. As I live in England , it's no probs getting hold of a SCART TV! However I also noticed that people are using the ArcadeVGA (from ultimarc). Now, if using the SCART TV as my display, is it possible to use other video cards to connect to the TV or do I 'have' to opt for the ArcadeVGA? The reason I ask, is that I'd like to be able to play the odd modern 3D PC game in cab and obviously only a half decent vid card would be sufficient. If I was was to use a regular vid card (as opposed to ArcadVGA), would additional hardware be needed to interface correctly/safely to the SCART TV ?
What do you guys recommend?..should I forget about wanting to play PC games and just go for the ArcadeVGA? Also, as the ArcadeVGA has only 64MB onboard, how will it cope with running the most demanding MAME games ? (later stuff etc?) and also other emulators?
Thanks a lot for any help in advance guys, it's verry much appreciated
Best regards
Craig
A TV can only correctly display a 15Khz video signal. A normal PC video signal is 31Khz. A lot of video cards can output a 15Khz signal when the hardware is programmed directly, but this is usually impossible within windows. Therefore, if you're looking at using a "normal" video card, it must be one that can be programmed to work at 15Khz (there's a list of compatible cards in the AdvanceMAME documentation) and you're probably looking at running it from DOS or Linux.
You can use a scan convertor (a separate box which sits betwen your PC and TV) to convert a 31Khz signal to a 15Khz one, but this defeats the purpose of using a SCART TV, as the conversion will not be authentic to the original hardware of the arcade games. If you don't care about this, you may as well just get a video card with S-Video or use a PC monitor.
The Arcade VGA copes well with most modern PC games, mainly because it's running at such low resolutions (in PC terms). 64Mb is more than enough for anything currently playable in MAME - graphics card specs. are not really important to it.
What to recommend really depends on what you want. If you're not too bothered about arcade authenticity and want to play a few very new PC games, just go for a normal video card with S-Video out. If you want the real arcade experience and can live without super high-end PC games, get an Arcade VGA. Having plentiful and cheap access to SCART TVs means us brits can save a lot by not buying arcade monitors, and still get near identical results!