
Hope someone could help and give some suggestions
Thanks
Thanks for the reply buddy. I don't get termintors on the output BNCs. What it is ? Is it insdie the RGB cable for console or on the decoder card (BKM-48X)? Could you please show me some picture ?niall wrote:Can't see any of your pics, but I have a similar sounding issue on two BVM-20F1E's - waving white sine wave lines which are constantly moving. It disappears on one set after 20-30 mins warmup, but the other is permanent. I suspect one of the boards needs replacing, so I'll be swapping them over one by one to try and isolate which board. I'll post a pic of my issue shortly.
EDIT: ok I can view the inline images above if I open in a new tab. Yours looks pretty good - have you got terminators on each of the output BNCs? Problem happens with all sources - other consoles, DVD player etc.?
Here's my issue - lines are constantly moving, underlying source material looks perfect just this interference overlay - mostly white, sometimes picks up colour:
The recent post is my own teaching,you can refer that post, I just picked up my BVM-D20F1J from Janpan ( I live in China).Now The Monitor is in bad condition after long distance travel (By UPS Airline)... And I also need someone help to fix....alfshusen wrote:Hello
I am looking for a monitor for retro gaming and I was thinking about SONY BVM-D24E1WU or SONY BVM-D32E1WU.
I understand that the Sony BVM-20F1U is an equally good monitor? I am going to use NES, SNES, SEGA consoles so i don't really need 16:9, but I thought it could be nice to be able to hook up some newer consoles too, since the 16:9 BVM-D monitors are just as good as the BVM-20F1U to handle 240p signals. BMV-D could maybe be an all in one monitor![]()
But almost every monitor i can find on ebay has some issues. Like some sort of discoloration in one or more corner of the screen, and they have about 50 to 70000 hours on them.
What's causing these problems. Could this be sorted out easy with manual degaussing or is it something more expensive going on? Or are they simply worn out?
And are these crt monitors very fragile when it comes to shipping? Can they easily become damaged? If i am going to get one i probably have to ship it a long way.
Need some advice here, since its going to be expensive to buy the monitor and have it shipped.
Yes, E class is better than F class, but E= 1000 TVL, F = 900 TVL. (Side note: Higher TV lines of resolution spec is "better" for professional applications, but games have an aesthetic component that doesn't necessarily agree with this simple definition.) However, this is only for 20" models. Additionally, some lines that do keep the "F" designation for TVL did not have "E" variants, like the D series. There is a D20F1U, and there is a D24E1WU, but there is not a D20E1U or a D24F1WU (and it makes sense - the physically wider D24 can more easily support 1000 TVL than a regular 20" monitor).snoopyj wrote:E class is better than F class E=900 TV Lines F=1000 TV Lines
Sony BVM-D24 and the Sony FW900 VGA monitor even use the same tube - just a different chassis. As Ed stated you need a XRGB to run 15khz sources in good quality, so from a cost perspective you don't save anything. Plus the BVMs are easier to handle than a CRT/XRGB combo.How comparable are pc crt monitors to the more professional crt monitors like the bvm and pvm?