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Post by choplifter on Mar 18, 2012 23:12:07 GMT
I think the quality of image depends quite a lot on the size of TV you have. On a smaller 14" CRT TV even RF can look really good (provided the RF lead isn't knackered) after all thats what most consoles were played on at the time. Larger TV's show up more interference and blurring so benefit more from a better signal, I wouldn't go back from RGB on my pretty big gaming TV now. How do you get RGB from a SMS in North America? We don't have SCART here.. Haven't tried it on the big screen, but AV cords with my 20" CRTV looks amazing. My Atari 2600 JR looked great though on my LCD surprisingly, so I might try it to see how it looks.
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zavias
Wonderboy
I am error
Posts: 815
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Post by zavias on Mar 19, 2012 1:37:26 GMT
I think the quality of image depends quite a lot on the size of TV you have. On a smaller 14" CRT TV even RF can look really good (provided the RF lead isn't knackered) after all thats what most consoles were played on at the time. Larger TV's show up more interference and blurring so benefit more from a better signal, I wouldn't go back from RGB on my pretty big gaming TV now. How do you get RGB from a SMS in North America? We don't have SCART here.. Haven't tried it on the big screen, but AV cords with my 20" CRTV looks amazing. My Atari 2600 JR looked great though on my LCD surprisingly, so I might try it to see how it looks. You have to get an RGB Scart to component converter. Looks awesome with no color bleeding, etc. You won't notice much of a difference on a 20" crt, but anything bigger it makes a huge difference.
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Post by Kaunisto on Nov 30, 2017 17:07:07 GMT
RF cables have a tendency to break down over time, or with too much bending etc, so the picture quality tends to degrade. That's my problem (in the SS-55 switch). I don't suppose there's anything to do about it (aside turning it to different positions to find the sweet spot), but anyone got any suggestions?
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