
I successfully did a similar trick on a Sony Hi-Scan, though because it would only work at 33.75khz I could only do this for 21:9 movies at 824i or something like that
The Original Xbox does 720p and 1080i with quite a bit of games:Nekoi wrote:I haven't tried these particular settings. But I'm pretty sure it won't work. These monitors only seem to sync display modes they were made for. I tried to get it to display 640x480 with a refresh rate greater than 60. Didn't work.
And even if it would work, there is still the question how you would get such a resolution to the monitor. I cannot even get the regular 1080i to the BVM over RGB in a usefull way (since the extron interface doesn't like interlaced video). I can get 1080i to the BVM over HD SDI and component video. But HDMI to SDI converters only support standard modes, same with HDMI to component converters. Only way I can see right now might be if you have a graphics card that can output component video.
You can just run VGA straight to the BVM, since it accepts RGB. If it only has composite sync, you'll to combine H and V sync with a simple T-connector or, failing that, and Extron device.Nekoi wrote:Only way I can see right now might be if you have a graphics card that can output component video.
I am using an Extron device. It works well for progressive video, but not for interlaced video. The 1080i60 image that arrives at the monitor is garbage. The image is too dark, parts of the image have very high contrast, others low and there is ghosting. That's why I said I don't know how I can get 1080i to the monitor in a useful way.BazookaBen wrote:You can just run VGA straight to the BVM, since it accepts RGB. If it only has composite sync, you'll to combine H and V sync with a simple T-connector or, failing that, and Extron device.Nekoi wrote:Only way I can see right now might be if you have a graphics card that can output component video.