OSSC (DIY video digitizer & scandoubler)
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Has a release date been confirmed for this yet?
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
DIY kits have already started shipping, and first batch of pre-assembled boards is in manufacturing.lettuce wrote:Has a release date been confirmed for this yet?
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Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Hello. I wonder if this "digitizer" will really imporve video quality for PS2 games wich run on 480i? Or is it mostly dedicated for 240i games? Thanks
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Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Dude, you're my hero. If they call this thing the new king I am so ditching the framemeister.
Because really if this saves me messing around with all the systems that use component and the cost of a Toro I feel like that's worth it on its own.
Because really if this saves me messing around with all the systems that use component and the cost of a Toro I feel like that's worth it on its own.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
The output with 480i sources looks and feels similar to what you'd experience on a CRT: no lag but some flicker in vertical direction. PS2 and some other systems have an internal flicker filter which mitigates it at the price of sharpness, though. You'll need to use Framemeister or 480i deinterlacing of your TV (with OSSC's oncoming interlace passthrough feature) if you want some nicer-looking result in general.Popolocrois wrote:Hello. I wonder if this "digitizer" will really imporve video quality for PS2 games wich run on 480i? Or is it mostly dedicated for 240i games? Thanks
You probably still want to keep Framemeister, e.g. for the reason above. I've designed OSSC more like a DIY/hobbyist system instead of something which would compete with commercial scalers, although it can hold its own well in many areas.Smashbro29 wrote:Dude, you're my hero. If they call this thing the new king I am so ditching the framemeister.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Looks like it might be possible to add audio to the DIY version.

The audio board is a project of borti4938 who also did several other projects like the SNES Super CIC board or the RGB bypass amp for N64 and SNES Mini.

The audio board is a project of borti4938 who also did several other projects like the SNES Super CIC board or the RGB bypass amp for N64 and SNES Mini.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Ha, this thing isn't even officially out yet and people are hacking it, nice 

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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Some good news and some bad news:
Good news it that newest firmware has mostly eliminated the jitter issues a few people have had with some 15kHz sources. Also, I just received status update from the fab that the first batch of pre-assembled boards will be finally finished later this week. They still need to be tested, but unless there have been problems with SMT, I should get them in about 2 weeks. Then it's only matter of attaching case plexis, after which they are good to go to the first people on the reservation queue.
Bad news is that some TVs have been found to not tolerate the linedoubled signal generated from SNES in 60Hz. The root cause is unevenness in hsync period which SNES makes in 60Hz mode as already discussed in page 2 of the thread. OSSC operates as a linedoubler, so the discrepancy ends up to the output signal to a certain extent (as slightly varying pixel clock period), which unfortunately causes the most sensitive TVs to go out in sync. The compatibility list will be updated on the coming weeks with test results from different TVs.
Good news it that newest firmware has mostly eliminated the jitter issues a few people have had with some 15kHz sources. Also, I just received status update from the fab that the first batch of pre-assembled boards will be finally finished later this week. They still need to be tested, but unless there have been problems with SMT, I should get them in about 2 weeks. Then it's only matter of attaching case plexis, after which they are good to go to the first people on the reservation queue.
Bad news is that some TVs have been found to not tolerate the linedoubled signal generated from SNES in 60Hz. The root cause is unevenness in hsync period which SNES makes in 60Hz mode as already discussed in page 2 of the thread. OSSC operates as a linedoubler, so the discrepancy ends up to the output signal to a certain extent (as slightly varying pixel clock period), which unfortunately causes the most sensitive TVs to go out in sync. The compatibility list will be updated on the coming weeks with test results from different TVs.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
do you know what other line doublers (like the older XRGBs) do differently in this regard ?Bad news is that some TVs have been found to not tolerate the linedoubled signal generated from SNES in 60Hz. The root cause is unevenness in hsync period which SNES makes in 60Hz mode as already discussed in page 2 of the thread.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Well to be fair the XRGB3 was hardly universally compatible either.
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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
of course not and I know how complicated the SNES can be with other processors.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
My guess is that the change in output pixel clock period is distributed to a larger number of pixels, resulting to less abrupt change so that the receiver PLL in the display does not lose lock so easily. There's still some change of achieving that with OSSC, by perhaps using several PLLs in cascade with bandwidth lowering at each step. Those kind of changes would make the firmware quite SNES-specific though.Fudoh wrote:do you know what other line doublers (like the older XRGBs) do differently in this regard ?Bad news is that some TVs have been found to not tolerate the linedoubled signal generated from SNES in 60Hz. The root cause is unevenness in hsync period which SNES makes in 60Hz mode as already discussed in page 2 of the thread.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Maybe it's worth trying a simple HDMI to VGA or component conversion on these problematic sets see if they are more tolerant on those inputs?
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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Just for clarity, is this issue for SNES with 60hz mod, does that mean snes at 50hz is fine, and super famicom at 60hz (or 50hz) is fine too?
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
No, it can definitely affect both SNES and Super Famicom at 60hz. Not sure about the Mini/Jr as I don't currently have one. 50hz is generally fine in my tests but who wants 50hz 

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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Has anyone tried sync on luma with the snes, or will it make no difference? My TV certainly behaves differently with luma versus composite sync.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Yeah I've tried sync on luma didn't make a difference with this problem.
Edit - So I tried analogue inputs on the problematic TVs. On the Panasonic it made no difference. On the Sony, I could finally get a picture but there was too much instability for it to be really usable. That's with VGA, component I couldn't get working with the HD Fury 2 (not sure why, never used it before), but I don't hold out much hope that it would cure the problem.
Edit - So I tried analogue inputs on the problematic TVs. On the Panasonic it made no difference. On the Sony, I could finally get a picture but there was too much instability for it to be really usable. That's with VGA, component I couldn't get working with the HD Fury 2 (not sure why, never used it before), but I don't hold out much hope that it would cure the problem.
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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
This is all getting very exciting. Sorry if I missed it earlier in the thread, I have had a check back but didn't see it - does anyone know how this machine handles the Sonic 2 split screen resolution?
Cheers
Cheers

Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Just registered to leave my acknowledgements to marqs!!!
Thank you for your great project
I followed the topic here as a reader long time ago where I was thinking about to buy a scaler for my LCD TV... I decided to wait for the OSSC.
A few days ago I received my OSSC-DIY-Kit... Assembling everything... And... I was impressed: my SNES never looked better on my TV
THANK YOU marqs!
I also have to say that marqs was very very patient replying to my mails regarding my many questions regarding my audio add-on.
And hey... The PCB fits and it works (not extensively tested)
Here is a small picture of the final installation. At the moment I'm thinking of sharing the PCB design and 'firmwarefix'.

Thank you for your great project

I followed the topic here as a reader long time ago where I was thinking about to buy a scaler for my LCD TV... I decided to wait for the OSSC.
A few days ago I received my OSSC-DIY-Kit... Assembling everything... And... I was impressed: my SNES never looked better on my TV

THANK YOU marqs!
I also have to say that marqs was very very patient replying to my mails regarding my many questions regarding my audio add-on.
And hey... The PCB fits and it works (not extensively tested)

Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Will everyone on the mailing/google list from before get first priority for ordering?
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Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Yeah, I just read the writeup, I think you're missing a big opportunity here man. You're a few features shy of kicking the mini to the curb and then some. Even just the audio would make this an instant buy for me.marqs wrote:The output with 480i sources looks and feels similar to what you'd experience on a CRT: no lag but some flicker in vertical direction. PS2 and some other systems have an internal flicker filter which mitigates it at the price of sharpness, though. You'll need to use Framemeister or 480i deinterlacing of your TV (with OSSC's oncoming interlace passthrough feature) if you want some nicer-looking result in general.Popolocrois wrote:Hello. I wonder if this "digitizer" will really imporve video quality for PS2 games wich run on 480i? Or is it mostly dedicated for 240i games? ThanksYou probably still want to keep Framemeister, e.g. for the reason above. I've designed OSSC more like a DIY/hobbyist system instead of something which would compete with commercial scalers, although it can hold its own well in many areas.Smashbro29 wrote:Dude, you're my hero. If they call this thing the new king I am so ditching the framemeister.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Let him build some experience with it and hopefully make some profit to reinvest in a future, maybe more complete revision, if he feels it can be done.
Just repeating what's been said many times but the additional features we're asking for certainly would push the price up and indeed propulse the thing to actual consumer-level, market-player category.
Such step up does imply a lot more things to think about and be prepared for I believe, unless you already have a network and ready structure I mean (otherwise people who turned a hobby into a business from scratch have loooooong stories to tell lol)
Just repeating what's been said many times but the additional features we're asking for certainly would push the price up and indeed propulse the thing to actual consumer-level, market-player category.
Such step up does imply a lot more things to think about and be prepared for I believe, unless you already have a network and ready structure I mean (otherwise people who turned a hobby into a business from scratch have loooooong stories to tell lol)
Strikers1945guy wrote:"Do we....eat chicken balls?!"
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Borti, can we get the make/model of your TV for the compatibility list?

This isn't supposed to be kicking the Mini to the curb, it's a replacement for the older XRGB3/2 series line-doublers.You're a few features shy of kicking the mini to the curb and then some.
Give us $7k for the license fee then and you can have audioEven just the audio would make this an instant buy for me.

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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
I'm hoping the final product is an overall improvement over the XRGB-3. I'd be very interested in purchasing one then.BuckoA51 wrote: This isn't supposed to be kicking the Mini to the curb, it's a replacement for the older XRGB3/2 series line-doublers.
Have there been any new comparisons?
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Isn't Sonic 2 splitscreen just using standard interlaced output? I tried that some months ago while testing a MD, and it worked as expected.cleeg wrote:This is all getting very exciting. Sorry if I missed it earlier in the thread, I have had a check back but didn't see it - does anyone know how this machine handles the Sonic 2 split screen resolution?
Cheers
Of course. They'll be split into a couple groups by reservation date, and then have the possibility of ordering a board from a corresponding batch. The same principle goes for DIY-kits even though numbers and waiting time are smaller there (everyone who've registered for a DIY kit before 16th Feb should have received an e-mail on ordering details).kardus wrote:Will everyone on the mailing/google list from before get first priority for ordering?
Yeah, trying to cram all possible features into the first board would not have been a good idea, considering I've had only my spare time for the project and no supplier contacts to China which would allow buying components in competitive pricesXyga wrote:Let him build some experience with it and hopefully make some profit to reinvest in a future, maybe more complete revision, if he feels it can be done.
Just repeating what's been said many times but the additional features we're asking for certainly would push the price up and indeed propulse the thing to actual consumer-level, market-player category.
Such step up does imply a lot more things to think about and be prepared for I believe, unless you already have a network and ready structure I mean (otherwise people who turned a hobby into a business from scratch have loooooong stories to tell lol)

It's not just the licence. If audio was included, I would have liked to do it properly, including dual-RCA jacks for each input, and maybe even toslink.BuckoA51 wrote:Give us $7k for the license fee then and you can have audio
Great to hear the add-on is working, and that there was no issues during assemblyborti4938 wrote:I also have to say that marqs was very very patient replying to my mails regarding my many questions regarding my audio add-on.
And hey... The PCB fits and it works (not extensively tested)Here is a small picture of the final installation. At the moment I'm thinking of sharing the PCB design and 'firmwarefix'.

Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
marqs wrote:Of course.

Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
It's a huge improvement over the XRGB3 both in terms of picture noise/quality and compatibility.I'm hoping the final product is an overall improvement over the XRGB-3.
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: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
Have you had more time to mess with games that have 240p to 480i transitions?BuckoA51 wrote: It's a huge improvement over the XRGB3 both in terms of picture noise/quality and compatibility.
Not sure if it was your review on videogameperfection or not. It mentioned some issues.
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
the OSSC itself does this really fast, but on a digital display will most likely still trigger a resync on the display's side. That's still MUCH faster than the FM though.Have you had more time to mess with games that have 240p to 480i transitions?
Re: DIY video digitizer & scandoubler
So 720p is not possible for this device then?