Braca862 wrote:Hello, I'm new to this forum. I have a Sony Bravia 40" KDL40W600B LED TV. I recently got the framemeister xrgb and I have 10 consoles, which are:
-NES
-Super NES
-Sega CDX
-PS1
-N64
-Dreamcast
-PS2
-Gamecube
-Xbox 360
-PS4
Of the ten, only the Super NES, CDX, and PS1 are connected to the Framemeister via euroSCART cables with csync, and so far, they picture looks fantastic, almost like playing on an emulator. The PS2 is connected directly to the TV via component cable, and the 360 and PS4 are connected directly to the TV via HDMI. Soon, I'll buy a pre-modded RGB N64, since the current one I have has the serial # NS2, which cannot be modded to RGB. I'm gonna have to wait a long time to have someone mod my NES or buy a pre-modded NES, as I have no skills to mod it myself. I currently have no idea how to add the Gamecube on the list, and I'll soon buy a VGA box for the Dreamcast.
I do have a couple of questions:
1. What settings for the framemeister can you recommend to me based on my TV?
2. Whenever I turn on a system, there seems to be some kind of delay. For instance, when I turn on the PS1, the framemesiter losses signal for several seconds, which skips the entire startup bootscreen. Is there a way to fix this? This also happens on the Super NES and CDX, but when I reset those two consoles, they start up fine.
3. Are there ways to adjust the screen size without degrading the quality? I've noticed that the picture thens to be more clearly when the screen size is SMART_X1.
4. Is there a way to remove all that dithering that is plaguing the PS1? The SCART cable I have for it has Luma.
5. When I do get a VGA box for the dreamcast, how do I connect it to the framemeister?
6. How come the earlier N64 consoles can be easily modded to RGB, while the later ones with the NS2 serial numbers cannot?
I can answer a few
of those questions for you and others here in
the fourm can recommend settings that can help you. You can also visit
http://junkerhq.net/xrgb/index.php/XRGB ... AMEMEISTER for some recommended settings.
Question 2: This is due
to the framemeister locking on
to the sync signal. If most
of your signals are 240p there's an option in
the menu which is SYNC_SET > SYNC_MODE and usually it's on AUTO. If you turn that
to OFF then when you switch between say
the PS1, CDX, SNES
the signal most
of the time be instant on being 240p usually has
the same composite sync signal range across
the board, however if you have a console that can output 480i
like the N64 or Dreamcast
the signal will be lost briefly and re-synced
to the 480i sync signal. I usually leave
the setting
to AUTO since nothing important happens in
the first few seconds
of the framemeister syncing.
Question 3: I believe Smart X1 is
the native signal scaled
to 480p and it's pixel
to pixel so it's matching
the 1080p, 720p signal pixel by pixel.
Question 5:
The Toro is
the best VGA box you can buy for
the Dreamcast, it can output 240p, 480i or 480p over Euro SCART and it combines
the Horizontal and Vertical signals
to composite sync so you would just hook it up
like any other Euro SCART device
to the framemeister.
http://www.beharbros.com/#!toro/cfom
Question 6:
The earlier N64 consoles have a Digital
to Analogue chip shown here by RetroRGB
http://retrorgb.com/n64rgbcompatible.html that has analogue RGB natively on its pins, it was just never connected
to the multi-out on
the motherboard.
However there is a new N64 RGB Mod board that will work on ANY Nintendo 64 regardless
of what revision or serial number you have. It's made by
the same guy who made
the NESRGB and is inexpensive.
http://etim.net.au/shop/shop.php?crn=20 ... how_detail If your in Europe, Otaku made a mod before Tim that does
the exact same thing.
http://www.otakus-store.net/en/see-all- ... b-mod.html Both boards take
the digital video signal and convert it
to analogue that can be used by
the XRGB Framemeister.
From Tim's Website:
http://etim.net.au/n64rgb/instructions-new/
Finally there is a brand new mod that just came out called
the UltraHDMI which adds HDMI straight
to the Nintendo 64's video processor. UltraHDMI makes
the video sharper than
the framemeister, has some custom settings tailored directly
to the N64 video signals and doesn't lose sync between
the 240p and 480i video signals.
The results are simply stunning, here's some info about it from RetroRGB:
http://retrorgb.com/ultrahdmi.html
Hope this helps somehow
