PumpkinSpice
Banned
Hey you guys ever had an order from Solaris Japan and had issues?
Normal to have it "processing" for like 15 days?
Contact/email them.
Hey you guys ever had an order from Solaris Japan and had issues?
Normal to have it "processing" for like 15 days?
Nearing the end of my setup issues but the biggest remaining problem I have is trying to find a way to switch Scart connections. Is there any definitive way to get ones that don't degrade image quality? I have a need for i'd say 12 ports all together, so it would be nice to start figuring out how to handle this. I saw the one on Assembler but it seems to be stuck in preorder heaven so not practical right now.
Contact/email them.
I received it today despite the site not reflecting this, hooray!
i'd email them just to leave some feedback about it. it's something that can be improved.
Your TV can almost certainly take 480i/480p via component, and in a lot of cases will have a better result than any crappy cheap box.This thread is amazing, but all the extra knowledge has ultimately confused me! I'm on the look out for a PS2 AV-HDMI convertor so I can play PS2 games on my PC Monitor. Will I be fine to buy a standard one and be good to go?
Yes that will work perfectly with no lag (as the conversion is just colour transcoding). I did it for years to a Panasonic CRT.I have a question about SCART to YUV boxes. Let's say you want to hook up a Sega Saturn to a North American (no SCART or other RGB input) SD TV that has component inputs, would a SCART to YUV box do that with no lag and work properly? My understanding is that YUV means component at 15khz, and can handle 240p and 480i. Of course a 480i SD TV could not display 480p or anything @30khz anyway right?
He's talking about a PC monitor that may not have component inputs. If it doesn't then the best thing for a PS2 would be a component cable output into a component to HDMI converter that would go into the PC monitor. This, of course, would entail input lag as the converter or monitor itself would have to upscale from 480i/p to its native resolution. If some lag isn't a big deal then that would probably give a pretty good image, better than composite out and conversion.
Do you have a converter recommendation? Anyone else?Apologies I must have mentally skipped the 'PC monitor' bit. In which case yes a component to HDMI box will be as good as you can get.
Yes that will work perfectly with no lag (as the conversion is just colour transcoding). I did it for years to a Panasonic CRT.
Or drive half an hour and pay $30 for this Trinitron:
Should I get this Sanyo for free:
Or drive half an hour and pay $30 for this Trinitron:
Mike from Cinemassacre's setup:
https://youtu.be/R6ZDMvGZcd4?t=10m6s
Curious, is he using the Framemeister right? Do you just plug in your composite cables and then an HDMI going out?
Looking at this setup, he has composite switches hooked up to more composite switches. Is the Framemeister that good that, even though the signal gets a little downgraded going from a switch to another switch, that the Framemeister is able to still up-res the image?
Should I get this Sanyo for free:
Or drive half an hour and pay $30 for this Trinitron:
The Trinitron. They are A+ if it's in working order.
Mike from Cinemassacre's setup:
https://youtu.be/R6ZDMvGZcd4?t=10m6s
Curious, is he using the Framemeister right? Do you just plug in your composite cables and then an HDMI going out?
Looking at this setup, he has composite switches hooked up to more composite switches. Is the Framemeister that good that, even though the signal gets a little downgraded going from a switch to another switch, that the Framemeister is able to still up-res the image?
Apparently it's a KV-27FS120. This good enough?
Chances are I'm gonna be running a Wii U via component to it and a PS1 via composite or s-video
I don't think the signal degradation between switch boxes is really worth mentioning.
Not sure on that specific model, but Trinitrons are spectacular generally (I've had two over the years). Also the flat panel is much better than the beveled kind.
IMO, it's worth $20.
Mike from Cinemassacre's setup:
https://youtu.be/R6ZDMvGZcd4?t=10m6s
Curious, is he using the Framemeister right? Do you just plug in your composite cables and then an HDMI going out?
Looking at this setup, he has composite switches hooked up to more composite switches. Is the Framemeister that good that, even though the signal gets a little downgraded going from a switch to another switch, that the Framemeister is able to still up-res the image?
What's the difference in the two?
People who buy a Framemeister to improve composite signals baffle me...
I didn't once consider lag reduction to be a function worth buying the unit for, but I don't have a big ass gaudy modern television. Power to him if he's satisfied with it but the XRGB series is primarily about making the best of RGB in my eyes.
I thought the goal is to minimize the lag and take your TV's scaler out of the picture, not to make it look better. Regardless, it will make any signal look better. Composite on my TV is hilariously shit and I noticed a big difference in the short time I had to use a composite signal with my framemeister. of course, there's no reason to stick with that cable. If you've bought the framemeister, you should buy the better cables too.
That's a bit unfair. For non-modded native composite consoles (Famicom/NES, PC Engine models), the Framemeister is by far the best image you can get on a modern screen. And almost certainly lower lag too.People who buy a Framemeister to improve composite signals baffle me...
General question -- if I have no plans or interest in watching actual television programs on my gaming display (to which I would be connecting the xrgb mini FM), am I actually better off using a computer monitor, so far as lag and bang/buck are concerned? I am basically starting from scratch on the display side (old CRT is done, and I'd rather buy a new/modern display plus FM than search for antiques). Large PC monitors don't really cost that much these days, and I'm expecting the lag issue might be much improved vs. a TV. (???)
I would be running SNES and Saturn through RGB SCART, AV Fami through composite until I get NESRGB mod, Gamecube through S-video for Gameboy Player only, and Wii through the FM's D-link input for Wii, Gamecube (nintendont), and emus.
Hey again guys, I was wondering if anyone in here has info on Philips CDI? I don't plan to use the system much but I am hunting one down now, in the OP it shows that the S-video connection is yellow, which means on some models I guess, but the Scart is the same thing and from my research it shows RGB requires a mod to do so, so is a mod required to get S-video output too or is there some other means?
I know this is the obscure of obscure but, I can't find any resources for it..
As long as you are comfortable with a display no bigger than about 27" and have external speakers or headphones, I'd say yes, a computer monitor would be a fantastic option.
As long as you are comfortable with a display no bigger than about 27" and have external speakers or headphones, I'd say yes, a computer monitor would be a fantastic option.
Yeah that's what I've been thinking. This is gonna be set up in a small room, personal space, so the 27" range is suitable. Was just curious if the average PC monitor could be expected to outperform a TV in the same size/price range.
i really wish there was a big PC monitors category. i can't go back to small screens for my normal gaming but there's no HDTV with sub 1 frame of input lag yet and that bums me out.
also, i don't use anything else the TV has so if i replaced it with a Monitor, there wouldn't be any changes in my setup.
I have a 42" Panasonic Professional Plasma from 2013, and it's essentially a big monitor. (No tuner, no speakers, a wide array of input options.) These are great for gaming, and can be found for well under $1000 U.S. (I got mine for $350 Canadian IIRC) so that may be a viable option as well.
It will reduce lag compared to the vast majority of HD TV's upscalers being fed straight 240p or 480i. Of course no scaler itself can "reduce lag" it just tried to minimize the lag inherent in upscaling. I think of the Framemeister as a tax accountant, they charge you money but (hopefully) you pay less in the end cause they take out more from your original tax bill than they cost.
It just means only certain models have svideo and scart. Scart is basically nonexistent on them though, and the only one that had it was a non consumer euro version I believe. Svideo is on most of the other sets, except those smaller more console looking ones. Those are composite only. I forget which one I have, but it was easily modded for RGB. It's the original looking one.
CDI 220 found in France. french thread
I'd be keen to get some feedback on this or any other decent component to HDMI options too. Anyone have any experience of these? I'm thinking of GameCube.What component to HDMI options are out there?
I have found one of these:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B003VJ9RP6/?tag=neogaf0e-20
Looking to perhaps connect an OG Xbox to my HDMI switch.
I'd be keen to get some feedback on this or any other decent component to HDMI options too. Anyone have any experience of these? I'm thinking of GameCube.