I was originally looking for a "global" setting. I've been trying to approach the tv as a whole rather than on an individual input basis. The manual has helped a lot in understanding what everything means, but it doesn't do a very good job of explaining (granted i haven't read 100% yet) of the global/ individual channel settings.Ed Oscuro wrote:@ whitetornado:
http://www.broadcaststore.com/pdf/model ... manual.pdf
As a very rough guess, did you simply try the COLOR TEMP ADJ menu option (page 19 in this manual)?
If i had more technical know how with these monitors (outside of eight hours) i think putting together a website that walked the retro gamer through the complete set up of these BVM/ PVM type monitors would be great.
Something akin to this: http://www.cinemasource.com/articles/ca ... o_proj.pdf
Descriptions and recommendations for each setting and then for each console too. Kind of like Retro RGB on steroids, aimed specifically towards BVM/ PVM Monitors. I don't know if that would be beneficial in any way to anyone other than me though.
I've done a lot of home theater install so I'm very familiar with Avia and video essentials. Can these just be spun up in a DVD player and used like normal? I was curious if the RCA to BNC connection would be a concern for degradation and/ or the quality of the dvd player would influence or degrade the reference image?Ed Oscuro wrote: As for SMPTE color patterns...old Avia / Digital Video Essentials type DVD...However, somebody here recommended something free and better... For retro consoles, there's Artemio's test pattern suite.
Because of my experience with consumer electronics i figured i would calibrate the set to a reference level and then it would just function like a standard consumer set, albeit with incredible clarity and color. I would probably keep the overscan on normal to prevent the digitized edges and all the jaggies that can pop up in those things out. I'm not sure if that is the correct approach. I don't plan on running anything (console generation wise) beyond the original playstation on the monitor. I would like to add a SEGA CD and a NEO GEO to the set up at sometime too. I'm trying to keep the content at 240p, the rest i'll hook up to my regular set.Ed Oscuro wrote: For overscan settings...probably not.
The Bandridge is really nice. I've noticed zero degradation from one to two feet away while I've been setting this up. I'm actually surprised by it. You always expect some sort of degradation in these types of things.Xan wrote: I'm pretty sure just about any SCART splitter out there degrades image quality to some extent, so I wouldn't use them.