Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Hi guys,
I maintain an old DOS PC to play my old favourites like UFO: Enemy Unknown, DooM, Quake, Monkey Island etc. I realise I could just play most of these on a modern PC using DOSBox or source ports or whatever, but I am a sucker for authenticity and nostalgia so I like to play them in their original format. I don't think I need to explain that to most members of this forum!
At the moment I connect the DOS PC to my modern Dell LCD monitor, but I'd really like to see what it looks like on my PVM as I feel this would be a more authentic display for such an old machine. I've tried using a VGA > BNC cable to connect the PC to my PVM (combining the H and V sync cables with a T-shaped BNC coupler) but there's obviously an issue with the sync because the image isn't at all stable (though it does work).
After a bit more reading it seems this is due to the PC outputting 31KHz signal rather than the 15Khz expected by the PVM? Please correct me if I'm wrong. I also have no idea what resolution the DOS command-line runs at.
As I understand it you can get around the scan frequency issue by using a scan converter. What I'd like to know is, would an Extron VSC 100 do the job or do I need one of the more expensive Super Emotia units?
Any advice greatly appreciated.
I maintain an old DOS PC to play my old favourites like UFO: Enemy Unknown, DooM, Quake, Monkey Island etc. I realise I could just play most of these on a modern PC using DOSBox or source ports or whatever, but I am a sucker for authenticity and nostalgia so I like to play them in their original format. I don't think I need to explain that to most members of this forum!
At the moment I connect the DOS PC to my modern Dell LCD monitor, but I'd really like to see what it looks like on my PVM as I feel this would be a more authentic display for such an old machine. I've tried using a VGA > BNC cable to connect the PC to my PVM (combining the H and V sync cables with a T-shaped BNC coupler) but there's obviously an issue with the sync because the image isn't at all stable (though it does work).
After a bit more reading it seems this is due to the PC outputting 31KHz signal rather than the 15Khz expected by the PVM? Please correct me if I'm wrong. I also have no idea what resolution the DOS command-line runs at.
As I understand it you can get around the scan frequency issue by using a scan converter. What I'd like to know is, would an Extron VSC 100 do the job or do I need one of the more expensive Super Emotia units?
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Old DOS mode 13h games like DooM run in a very strange resolution. I doubt you can find anything that can convert it into something that a SONY monitor can display.
Your best bet is using an old Pac graphics card with S-video out. That will work, but look pretty crappy.
Your best bet is using an old Pac graphics card with S-video out. That will work, but look pretty crappy.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Starting in the late 80s, these titles were meant to be output on a 31khz display, so I wouldn't call a PVM more authentic.At the moment I connect the DOS PC to my modern Dell LCD monitor, but I'd really like to see what it looks like on my PVM as I feel this would be a more authentic display for such an old machine.
DOS (boot/prompt) is 400p70 and MCGA/VGA games are 200p70. A Extron VSC unit will convert that for you into 480i60, but you're adding interlacing and it won't look great.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Good info chaps - thanks very much. I guess I will just keep using my LCD then. 

Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
You would be far better off tracking down old CRT 31khz PC monitors.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
You could always look for an old VGA CRT monitor.
OSSC Forums - http://www.videogameperfection.com/forums
Please check the Wiki before posting about Morph, OSSC, XRGB Mini or XRGB3 - http://junkerhq.net/xrgb/index.php/Main_Page
Please check the Wiki before posting about Morph, OSSC, XRGB Mini or XRGB3 - http://junkerhq.net/xrgb/index.php/Main_Page
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Yeah, I think there's one at work I can have actually, I was just hoping I could use an existing display in my setup and not add another bulky CRT to it. Another display would make four displays total in my living room, not sure I want the authenticity of a CRT that badly! 

Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
There is a dos program called arcmon.exe that will force it to 15kHz. You can call it in your autoexec.bat. You will then need to combine the syncs.
I've run mame and many other emulators this way. I never tried anything 3d like doom. Probably won't look good.
I've run mame and many other emulators this way. I never tried anything 3d like doom. Probably won't look good.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Sounds interesting but seems it only supports a handful of video chipsets. Can't remember what card is in my DOS PC but pretty sure it's not one of the supported ones.antron wrote:There is a dos program called arcmon.exe that will force it to 15kHz. You can call it in your autoexec.bat. You will then need to combine the syncs.
I've run mame and many other emulators this way. I never tried anything 3d like doom. Probably won't look good.

Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Interesting that such a tool exists, but I am not sure whether it can work for mode 13h games. I guess it depends on how the tool is programmed. Even if it does work it will prolly cause problems with games since they have been coded to run at a higher refresh rate than 60hz.
If anyone tries this I am curious to know your results.
If anyone tries this I am curious to know your results.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
I saw a 36" dell dimension Vga Crt monitor for sale on craigslist a while back for $200.
Something like that would be excellent for a DOS pc.... Or even a Dreamcast mabeye..???
Most of these tubes only do up to 640X480 or 800x600.
Smaller Vga crts you can find for practically nothing.
Something like that would be excellent for a DOS pc.... Or even a Dreamcast mabeye..???
Most of these tubes only do up to 640X480 or 800x600.
Smaller Vga crts you can find for practically nothing.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
That Dell 36" probably runs its maximum at HD resolution or better.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
I used to play DOS games like this, connected to a TV. There were several TSRs written for the propose, and I remember Mon-Arc and VGATV were the two with the best compatibility. Not all video cards are compatible, I went through a few of them before I found a good one. Mode 13h works fine (don't pretty much all early VGA games use this mode?), as do the text modes. The text mode get replaced by another one with a different font but there is not adverse affect on the software.kamiboy wrote:Interesting that such a tool exists, but I am not sure whether it can work for mode 13h games. I guess it depends on how the tool is programmed. Even if it does work it will prolly cause problems with games since they have been coded to run at a higher refresh rate than 60hz.
If anyone tries this I am curious to know your results.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Ed Oscuro wrote:That Dell 36" probably runs its maximum at HD resolution or better.
I guess id have to know which monitor it was but that monitor was from the 90s and it was 4:3.
would it really be hd resolution?
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Cool, looks nice. And this is just a DOS PC connected via an Extron Emotia? You didn't have to use any programs to force a specific resolution or anything?
Does the DOS command line display on your PVM? Is it readable?
If so I'll get an Emotia.
Does the DOS command line display on your PVM? Is it readable?
If so I'll get an Emotia.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
The Emotia is fine with all classic DOS video modes, but what I would like to know (from copados33)
- How do you accomplish the 200p to 240p mapping. Did you maximize the vertical size on the Emotia or the display ? Doesn't this hurt the quality (PVM line mapping <> pixel output). On a standard 240p signal from the Emotia I would expect the image to be letterboxed (200 active lines + 20 black ones top and bottom).
- How does the 70Hz to 60Hz conversion work out for you ? (Dos is 400p70, MCGA is 200p70)
- How do you accomplish the 200p to 240p mapping. Did you maximize the vertical size on the Emotia or the display ? Doesn't this hurt the quality (PVM line mapping <> pixel output). On a standard 240p signal from the Emotia I would expect the image to be letterboxed (200 active lines + 20 black ones top and bottom).
- How does the 70Hz to 60Hz conversion work out for you ? (Dos is 400p70, MCGA is 200p70)
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Very nice. Why do you recommend the Emotia over say, a cheaper VSC 100 unit from the same company? Does it support something that the VSC 100 does not? Thanks.copados33 wrote:It is just a DOS PC, no extra software, the Emotia takes anything up to 60-65hz 31khz and downscales it to 15khz.
And I'm not using a PVM, just a cheapo CRT TV, on a PVM it will look a look a thousand times better
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
The Emotia and Super Emotia will output in true low-res 240p (means that you get proper scanlines).
All other Extron VSC units and units like the Emotia Xtreme or Super Emotia II merely output in 480i. It works, but you get an interlaced output without pronounced scanlines.
All other Extron VSC units and units like the Emotia Xtreme or Super Emotia II merely output in 480i. It works, but you get an interlaced output without pronounced scanlines.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
The one time I used my Emotia was to connect to a X68000 and the results were horrendous. Part of the issue I think was that the Emotia mixes the wrong two scan lines together when down converting and the only way to fix that is by adding another device to the already messy chain, which I of course refused to do.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Ah. Thanks. I definitely want an Emotia then.Fudoh wrote:The Emotia and Super Emotia will output in true low-res 240p (means that you get proper scanlines).
All other Extron VSC units and units like the Emotia Xtreme or Super Emotia II merely output in 480i. It works, but you get an interlaced output without pronounced scanlines.
That doesn't sound encouraging. Do you still have it?kamiboy wrote:The one time I used my Emotia was to connect to a X68000 and the results were horrendous. Part of the issue I think was that the Emotia mixes the wrong two scan lines together when down converting and the only way to fix that is by adding another device to the already messy chain, which I of course refused to do.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
You can find some alternatives to the Emotias here: http://scanlines.hazard-city.de/
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
I do, but if you ask because you are looking to acquire one I would recommend you to look elsewhere first. I want too much for my unit, and I prefer trades. I have a post about it in the trade section.hosser wrote:
That doesn't sound encouraging. Do you still have it?
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Ah, I was actually going to ask if you had any other sources you could test it with (a DOS PC would be ideal but I realise not many people keep those around these days...). I'm really curious to see what the DOS PC > Emotia > Sony PVM setup would look like, but not curious enough to lay down the cash to find out!kamiboy wrote:I do, but if you ask because you are looking to acquire one I would recommend you to look elsewhere first. I want too much for my unit, and I prefer trades. I have a post about it in the trade section.hosser wrote:
That doesn't sound encouraging. Do you still have it?

Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
I am a bit curious myself, but my Emotia is packed for shipping to a future owner, I cannot be arsed to bust it open for a test.
Not to mention my so called DOS PC, which is also packed away, and a bother to reassemble.
Not to mention my so called DOS PC, which is also packed away, and a bother to reassemble.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Nah no worries man, I totally get that.kamiboy wrote:I am a bit curious myself, but my Emotia is packed for shipping to a future owner, I cannot be arsed to bust it open for a test.
Not to mention my so called DOS PC, which is also packed away, and a bother to reassemble.

Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
He he, come to think of it, my PVM/BVM's are packed away as well.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
if you start them directly, it's still "DOS". The increased refresh rate was used to accomodate for the lower line count (200/240 and 400/480), while maintaining the 31khz standard. The 70Hz issue is one of the reason why DOSBOX emulation isn't ideal - as the underlying Windows is usually running fixed at 60Hz these days.I use an old Pentium 3 with Windows 98 equipped with an Ati rage 128 AGP and run most of my DOS games from there, I do not use "real" DOS.
You need a game which runs smoothly and with locked v-sync to test the framerate conversion. Can't think of anything right now.
The resolution mapping is easy to check: if you got a game which uses a sharp 1-pixel-line font (like Doom for its weapon stats in the lower right corner) you can check if these are properly mapped to use just a single scanline on your CRT or if they're blurred across two scanlines.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Just want to point out that this isn't the fault of DOSBox or Windows, it's display manufacturers.Fudoh wrote:if you start them directly, it's still "DOS". The increased refresh rate was used to accomodate for the lower line count (200/240 and 400/480), while maintaining the 31khz standard. The 70Hz issue is one of the reason why DOSBOX emulation isn't ideal - as the underlying Windows is usually running fixed at 60Hz these days.I use an old Pentium 3 with Windows 98 equipped with an Ati rage 128 AGP and run most of my DOS games from there, I do not use "real" DOS.
Both my LCDs can do 70hz (one through fixed refresh, other through G-Sync) and both display DOS games perfectly with DOSBox/Win8.
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
An update: Today I managed to get my DOS PC to output to my PVM 
I dusted off my XRGB3 which I haven't used in a while. Connected it to my PVM with a VGA > RGBHV BNC cable and joined the H and V sync cables with a BNC T coupler. Then I enabled low screen resolutions on the XRGB3, set the output resolution to 320x240 and set the D2 input to RGBHV (yeah I'm using the D2 input on the XRGB - do I remember reading that was a bad idea? I don't have a D-Input > VGA converter so no choice at the moment).
It works. But it looks pretty bad. The command line is not very readable. Turning the LP filter off helped a bit, and setting the drawing method to non-interlace made it a little less blurry. Any sharpness setting other than 7 looks horrible. Fiddling with the screen size settings doesn't help.
I fiddled with the dot-by-dot setting a bit and the X1 setting looks amazing (I can read the text perfectly) BUT unfortunately this is because it zooms in so far, meaning you can only see the top left quarter of the screen area. So that's no good.
Anything else I can change on the XRGB to get a better picture or is this the best I am likely to get with this setup?
Photo 1 | Photo 2

I dusted off my XRGB3 which I haven't used in a while. Connected it to my PVM with a VGA > RGBHV BNC cable and joined the H and V sync cables with a BNC T coupler. Then I enabled low screen resolutions on the XRGB3, set the output resolution to 320x240 and set the D2 input to RGBHV (yeah I'm using the D2 input on the XRGB - do I remember reading that was a bad idea? I don't have a D-Input > VGA converter so no choice at the moment).
It works. But it looks pretty bad. The command line is not very readable. Turning the LP filter off helped a bit, and setting the drawing method to non-interlace made it a little less blurry. Any sharpness setting other than 7 looks horrible. Fiddling with the screen size settings doesn't help.
I fiddled with the dot-by-dot setting a bit and the X1 setting looks amazing (I can read the text perfectly) BUT unfortunately this is because it zooms in so far, meaning you can only see the top left quarter of the screen area. So that's no good.
Anything else I can change on the XRGB to get a better picture or is this the best I am likely to get with this setup?

Photo 1 | Photo 2
Re: Connecting a DOS PC to a PVM
Have you tried the software solution?