RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I think the low resolution GBA output scaled with sharp pixels on a large screen can be shocking, haha.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
That's why GB and GBA titles really benefit from a "grid" pixel filter like this:
largish pic:
largish pic:
Spoiler
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Tempest_2084
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Huh, ok. I stand corrected then, the 360p mode is working as intended.Guspaz wrote:This is what the Konami logo looks like in an emulator with integer scaling:
This looks identical to your GBI RT5X output to me (barring possibly some colour differences that could be caused by your GBI LUT settings or your TV), so as far as I can tell, 360p looks perfect in all of your screenshots... You keep saying it looks pixelated, but... isn't that how it's supposed to look? The gameboy is very low resolution, the GBA is 160p, and the original is just 144p.
It looks like you might have turned on scanlines, hard to tell, you should turn those off as the GBA was never intended to be on a CRT, and it looks like they might be misaligned on the RT5X.
Yes I had 25% scanlines on, I'll turn those off.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Hi everyone, just registered to be able to ask a few questions
1) Is the Retrotink5x likely to fix the SNES jitter problems I'm currently experiencing with OSSC on my Sony tv?
2) I read about possible MVS problems on the RT5X page, but assume this won't be a problem when a DFO is installed?
3) Any options available (like a mask, or setting h/v.active) to hide the unwanted Mega Drive garbage from the screen? Or to horizontally shift the image if a game isn't properly centered?
Thanks, Bart.
1) Is the Retrotink5x likely to fix the SNES jitter problems I'm currently experiencing with OSSC on my Sony tv?
2) I read about possible MVS problems on the RT5X page, but assume this won't be a problem when a DFO is installed?
3) Any options available (like a mask, or setting h/v.active) to hide the unwanted Mega Drive garbage from the screen? Or to horizontally shift the image if a game isn't properly centered?
Thanks, Bart.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
1) Jitter seems to be an OSSC nuance. Haven't experienced anything like that with the SNES nor the NES which are the 2 I know of to have jitter issues on the OSSC.bmp02 wrote:Hi everyone, just registered to be able to ask a few questions
1) Is the Retrotink5x likely to fix the SNES jitter problems I'm currently experiencing with OSSC on my Sony tv?
2) I read about possible MVS problems on the RT5X page, but assume this won't be a problem when a DFO is installed?
3) Any options available (like a mask, or setting h/v.active) to hide the unwanted Mega Drive garbage from the screen? Or to horizontally shift the image if a game isn't properly centered?
Thanks, Bart.
2) Dunno about this one personally, sorry! Probably is fine with the DFO. I bet someone can better answer this.
3) Outputting to 1080p(Over) should cover most cases and you can shift the image up and down through the remote. Unfortunately not a thing with the 1200p and 1440p modes if that's your thing and there's no masks that I'm aware of.
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TooBeaucoup
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
1. When using triple buffer mode on the 5X, there is no issue with jitter on the SNES.bmp02 wrote:Hi everyone, just registered to be able to ask a few questions
1) Is the Retrotink5x likely to fix the SNES jitter problems I'm currently experiencing with OSSC on my Sony tv?
2) I read about possible MVS problems on the RT5X page, but assume this won't be a problem when a DFO is installed?
3) Any options available (like a mask, or setting h/v.active) to hide the unwanted Mega Drive garbage from the screen? Or to horizontally shift the image if a game isn't properly centered?
Thanks, Bart.
2. If I recall, there was an issue at the top of the screen with the image curling as well as a few sync issues. I think it's all been, mostly, resolved if you look at the Tink5X firmware notes on the official site.
3. No masking options yet, although running Genesis games at 1080P (Over) helps. I'd be surprised if Mike doesn't add a masking feature in the near future. You can shift the image when using 1080p (Over). But, you won't be able to eliminate all of the unused nonsense on the left and right in games like the Sonic series.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
This was probably answered already but I couldn't find it. Do the Retrotink devices use a 7.5 IRE pedestal for composite and s-video inputs, or 0 IRE?
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
A few questions.
1. My 4K tv supports does not support aspect ratio correcting so 1920X1440 is stuck in widescreen no matter what I do. Is is possible that the RT5X could support 2560X1440 and then 4:3 an (UNDER) 1920X1440 mode similar to 960 in the 1080(UNDER) mode. Is it not possible as a limitation of the hardware?
2. Is a 1080p input passthrough possible or is that a limitation of the hardware?
3. What about 720p line doubled to 1440p? Is this possible?
Just a disclaimer. I really love the RetroTink 5X and I'm super grateful for all Mike Chi has done. He's a scaler genius and were are fortunate to have him in our community. I'm asking these things because I think it would be awesome if it could do these, among other new features. I know Mike Chi is busy working away at new features and fixes, my asking this isn't a "give me now!" attitude just excitement about the product. I know something like 1080p passthrough would probably be low on the priority list, even so I'd like to mention it and I'm not disappointed or upset that it wouldn't be a priority.
I'm happy to be part of this community and very grateful for the work Mike Chi has done.
1. My 4K tv supports does not support aspect ratio correcting so 1920X1440 is stuck in widescreen no matter what I do. Is is possible that the RT5X could support 2560X1440 and then 4:3 an (UNDER) 1920X1440 mode similar to 960 in the 1080(UNDER) mode. Is it not possible as a limitation of the hardware?
2. Is a 1080p input passthrough possible or is that a limitation of the hardware?
3. What about 720p line doubled to 1440p? Is this possible?
Just a disclaimer. I really love the RetroTink 5X and I'm super grateful for all Mike Chi has done. He's a scaler genius and were are fortunate to have him in our community. I'm asking these things because I think it would be awesome if it could do these, among other new features. I know Mike Chi is busy working away at new features and fixes, my asking this isn't a "give me now!" attitude just excitement about the product. I know something like 1080p passthrough would probably be low on the priority list, even so I'd like to mention it and I'm not disappointed or upset that it wouldn't be a priority.
I'm happy to be part of this community and very grateful for the work Mike Chi has done.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Remote overlays are now available for preorder from RetroLabs. Ships internationally.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Thanks!Tetelestai wrote:A few questions.
1. My 4K tv supports does not support aspect ratio correcting so 1920X1440 is stuck in widescreen no matter what I do. Is is possible that the RT5X could support 2560X1440 and then 4:3 an (UNDER) 1920X1440 mode similar to 960 in the 1080(UNDER) mode. Is it not possible as a limitation of the hardware?
2. Is a 1080p input passthrough possible or is that a limitation of the hardware?
3. What about 720p line doubled to 1440p? Is this possible?
Just a disclaimer. I really love the RetroTink 5X and I'm super grateful for all Mike Chi has done. He's a scaler genius and were are fortunate to have him in our community. I'm asking these things because I think it would be awesome if it could do these, among other new features. I know Mike Chi is busy working away at new features and fixes, my asking this isn't a "give me now!" attitude just excitement about the product. I know something like 1080p passthrough would probably be low on the priority list, even so I'd like to mention it and I'm not disappointed or upset that it wouldn't be a priority.
I'm happy to be part of this community and very grateful for the work Mike Chi has done.
1. 2560 x 1440 *may* be possible, although it would be serious abuse of the hardware. Nothing dangerous, but I wouldn't be hopeful that it'll work on every unit.
2. This is beyond the capability of the video ADC -- tbh, for 1080p a off the shelf commercial converter will do a great job.
3. Yes it is possible to scale 720p -> 1440p... although I personally didn't like the look of the results. Nearest neighbor was too blocky and using the interpolator resulted in something that looked very similar to having the TV or monitor do the job, so the mode was never added in. If there's interest, this one is an easy thing to do.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
^^
For those that have a QHD monitor (why oh why werent proper QHD TVs made?) I can see a 720p X2 mode with light scanlines maybe looking nice. You mentioned nearest neighbor scaling looked blocky, have you tried NN+ scanlines?
Then again, Im of the camp that says add every conceivably useful feature the hardware can handle. Have you thought any more about giving a 1080i/540p output any love?
For those that have a QHD monitor (why oh why werent proper QHD TVs made?) I can see a 720p X2 mode with light scanlines maybe looking nice. You mentioned nearest neighbor scaling looked blocky, have you tried NN+ scanlines?
Then again, Im of the camp that says add every conceivably useful feature the hardware can handle. Have you thought any more about giving a 1080i/540p output any love?
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I wonder if there should be some sort of "advanced" menu that lets you enable/disable stuff in the default easy-to-use menus. It would let people hide output resolutions they won't use or their TV doesn't support (making it faster to switch output resolutions and avoid their TV de-syncing), allow faster selection of optimized presets (by skipping the ones they don't own), and potentially enable experimental features like 2560x1440 output that might not work.mikechi2 wrote:1. 2560 x 1440 *may* be possible, although it would be serious abuse of the hardware. Nothing dangerous, but I wouldn't be hopeful that it'll work on every unit.
I have a use case for 1280x720 -> 2560x1440: I want to use my OS9 Macintosh on my 1440p monitor, but the highest resolution supported over VGA/DVI/HDMI is more or less 1920x1080, which is way too high resolution for such an old operating system originally designed around a 512x342 pixel display. If I output 720p to my 1440p monitor, the scaling is very blurry and unpleasant. I want to scale 1280x720 to 2560x1440 with nearest-neighbour scaling to preserve the sharpness original pixels, which are important for a computer desktop.mikechi2 wrote:3. Yes it is possible to scale 720p -> 1440p... although I personally didn't like the look of the results. Nearest neighbor was too blocky and using the interpolator resulted in something that looked very similar to having the TV or monitor do the job, so the mode was never added in. If there's interest, this one is an easy thing to do.
Right now I'm using 1024x768 scaled to 1440p, which my monitor seems to do an OK (but not good) job at scaling, without making things too small.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I second the idea of an advanced menu where we can hide resolutions and other features we don't normally use (480, 720, and 768 for me). It's a chore every time I want to go through the resolutions just to see which ones work best for any particular game. An expanded menu like OSSC's current OSD would be amazing.
Maybe add a 720p -> 1440p mode and then options both nearest neighbor and interpolation.
Another resolution which would be extremely niche but awesome to have would be 2048x1536. Some MiSTer users (including myself) are using old 9.7 inch iPad Retina displays to get ultra low lag and crystal clear picture quality.
Maybe add a 720p -> 1440p mode and then options both nearest neighbor and interpolation.
Another resolution which would be extremely niche but awesome to have would be 2048x1536. Some MiSTer users (including myself) are using old 9.7 inch iPad Retina displays to get ultra low lag and crystal clear picture quality.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I experience the exact same issue when running my Saturn through SCART RGB (using the RGC cable), it however does not occur when using the HD Retrovision component cables, it turns out the RGC SCART cable also requires to set LPF to on in order to remove some jailbars in a few games. Overall, I stick with the HD Retrovision cable since it allows me to use Frame Lock and reset from MODE without losing sync.TooBeaucoup wrote:Yeah, I get that. Just weird that my Saturn will work in frame lock just fine from a fresh system boot in every resolution mode and doesn't muck up until an in game MODE reset. I just thought it was odd. I enjoy frame lock since technically speaking the lag is lower, but it's obviously not a deal breaker. I just have to get up off my fat azz and reboot the console by hand if I really want frame lock for a Saturn game.Guspaz wrote:There's a reason why triple buffer is the default setting. It's the most compatible mode: there are things that will work buffered but not locked, but there is nothing that will work locked but not buffered.
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Tempest_2084
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
That would be awesome. There are a ton of resolutions that I know I can't use, but it's a pain to have to click through them and wait for the syncGuspaz wrote: I wonder if there should be some sort of "advanced" menu that lets you enable/disable stuff in the default easy-to-use menus. It would let people hide output resolutions they won't use or their TV doesn't support (making it faster to switch output resolutions and avoid their TV de-syncing), allow faster selection of optimized presets (by skipping the ones they don't own), and potentially enable experimental features like 2560x1440 output that might not work.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
@mikechi
Would you ever consider using an FPGA design to build a pure transcoder? I would really appreciate being able transcode signals without damaging the signal at the ADC step with "generic" sampling.
As it stands, there are very few machines to properly transcode and standardise all signals to one standard (component or RGB) and simultaneously drive CRTs and a video scaler with the output. The CRT doesn't matter, but feeding a video scaler can be problematic with most transcoders.
Would you ever consider using an FPGA design to build a pure transcoder? I would really appreciate being able transcode signals without damaging the signal at the ADC step with "generic" sampling.
As it stands, there are very few machines to properly transcode and standardise all signals to one standard (component or RGB) and simultaneously drive CRTs and a video scaler with the output. The CRT doesn't matter, but feeding a video scaler can be problematic with most transcoders.
We apologise for the inconvenience
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
This is something I've wished would be available more than once throughout the years. Have you found anything that does the job well enough in the meantime even if not perfect or covering all possible needs?orange808 wrote:Would you ever consider using an FPGA design to build a pure transcoder? I would really appreciate being able transcode signals without damaging the signal at the ADC step with "generic" sampling.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Isn't that exactly what the RGB2COMP and COMP2RGB are? Pure transcoders that operate in the analog domain and thus don't have any sort of issues or degradation caused by digital sampling.
Using an FPGA for the job would seem to introduce all of those sampling issues you're concerned about, much better to transcode in analog.
Using an FPGA for the job would seem to introduce all of those sampling issues you're concerned about, much better to transcode in analog.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
You tell me. Does the RGB2COMP have an all analog design like my Kramer FC-14? Or, does it perform ADC? If I'm misinformed, I will immediately purchase one of Chi's existing machines.Guspaz wrote:Isn't that exactly what the RGB2COMP and COMP2RGB are? Pure transcoders that operate in the analog domain and thus don't have any sort of issues or degradation caused by digital sampling.
Using an FPGA for the job would seem to introduce all of those sampling issues you're concerned about, much better to transcode in analog.
We apologise for the inconvenience
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
The FC-14 is very nice. I'm sure I can take care of it and keep it a long time, but it would be nice to have a widely available machine so people can stop paying crazy prices on eBay for old gear that needs recapping.fernan1234 wrote:This is something I've wished would be available more than once throughout the years. Have you found anything that does the job well enough in the meantime even if not perfect or covering all possible needs?orange808 wrote:Would you ever consider using an FPGA design to build a pure transcoder? I would really appreciate being able transcode signals without damaging the signal at the ADC step with "generic" sampling.
We apologise for the inconvenience
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I would have bought an RGB2COMP a long time ago if it didn't have a SCART connector but anything else instead, 4 or 5 RCA or BNC, or DE-15, anything would be fine. The better connectors are a nice thing about something like an FC-14 (and they are priced high but not really more than an RGB2COMP anyway).
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
The connectors aren't terribly important... Unless you need a different sync type, you just use the appropriate cable between the two devices. The important part is how good of a job the transcoder or scaler itself does.
I'm sure the Kramer FC-14 does a great job, and it's certainly flexible, but the only one I can find for sale is $150 USD used on eBay (or a new one for $260 USD in the UK), more than 2x the cost of a brand new (and under warranty) RGB2COMP.
I'm sure the Kramer FC-14 does a great job, and it's certainly flexible, but the only one I can find for sale is $150 USD used on eBay (or a new one for $260 USD in the UK), more than 2x the cost of a brand new (and under warranty) RGB2COMP.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I'm not sure. The COMP2RGB is fully analog (the TI LMH1251 is a purely analog transcoder), but I don't know what chip the RGB2COMP uses.orange808 wrote:You tell me. Does the RGB2COMP have an all analog design like my Kramer FC-14? Or, does it perform ADC? If I'm misinformed, I will immediately purchase one of Chi's existing machines.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Agreed, but I hate SCART connectors with a passion so I'll avoid anything that forces me to get a patch cable or adapter for it, any other type is OK.Guspaz wrote:The connectors aren't terribly important... Unless you need a different sync type, you just use the appropriate cable between the two devices. The important part is how good of a job the transcoder or scaler itself does.
And I suspect the RGB2COMP also uses an analog transcoder. I've never heard anyone point out a compromise in picture quality from using it.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
@Josh128
I'll take a look at the 540p stuff when I get a chance - this one is pretty easy. The 1080i stuff requires a reworking of design to allow for interlaced output timings. I'm interested in that, though, for a 480i downscaling mode. Really appreciate you asking in a reasonable manner as well
All the transcoders are fully analog. A digital version is kind of interesting, but I'm sure would have its own set of problems. It'd also be $200-300 or more given how few units would be sold. AFAIK there's no degradation for standard definition signals. Analog transcoding introduces a tiny loss at 480p but you'd need a high resolution digitizer to notice. It won't be perceptible on a CRT.
EDIT: you can use an OSSC plus HDMI->VGA or HDMI->component box as a digital transcoder.
I'll take a look at the 540p stuff when I get a chance - this one is pretty easy. The 1080i stuff requires a reworking of design to allow for interlaced output timings. I'm interested in that, though, for a 480i downscaling mode. Really appreciate you asking in a reasonable manner as well
All the transcoders are fully analog. A digital version is kind of interesting, but I'm sure would have its own set of problems. It'd also be $200-300 or more given how few units would be sold. AFAIK there's no degradation for standard definition signals. Analog transcoding introduces a tiny loss at 480p but you'd need a high resolution digitizer to notice. It won't be perceptible on a CRT.
EDIT: you can use an OSSC plus HDMI->VGA or HDMI->component box as a digital transcoder.
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Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Best news I've read in a long time! A fantastic feature for SD CRTs with content that needs higher resolution than 240p.mikechi2 wrote: I'm interested in that, though, for a 480i downscaling mode.
edit: and touching on the transcoder topic again, I'm imagining a device that converts across all the popular analogue input formats, CVBS, YC, YUV, and RGB, from any one format into the other, all from the same device. That would be pretty cool and worth a higher price sticker.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Awesome, looking forward to see what you can come up with!mikechi2 wrote:@Josh128
I'll take a look at the 540p stuff when I get a chance - this one is pretty easy. The 1080i stuff requires a reworking of design to allow for interlaced output timings. I'm interested in that, though, for a 480i downscaling mode. Really appreciate you asking in a reasonable manner as well
All the transcoders are fully analog. A digital version is kind of interesting, but I'm sure would have its own set of problems. It'd also be $200-300 or more given how few units would be sold. AFAIK there's no degradation for standard definition signals. Analog transcoding introduces a tiny loss at 480p but you'd need a high resolution digitizer to notice. It won't be perceptible on a CRT.
EDIT: you can use an OSSC plus HDMI->VGA or HDMI->component box as a digital transcoder.
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
Are you using an HDCRT?Josh128 wrote: Awesome, looking forward to see what you can come up with!
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I have a 36HS420 in my shop. Im currently using a 36FS210 in my gaming room. Its great for 240p/480i stuff, but if Mike can make a lagless mode (540p or 1080i ) thats accepted by the HS420 I would very likely make the HS my main gaming TV. It will allow for 480p, 480i (bob), and 240p and it offers a sharper picture than the FS210. It would pretty much be the perfect giant retro set for everything up to PS360 gen.
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=68605&start=79
viewtopic.php?f=6&t=68605&start=79
Re: RetroTINK 5x-Pro
I have a HS510 32" in storage. Last time I messed with it, I got a raspberry pi setup to display in 540p and it looked excellent. It took an awful lot of messing around to get the modeline right though. If Mike gets the 540p/1080i thing working, I'll definitely be interested to see how that goes. To be specific, I'd be interested in 480p in a 540p frame, centered timings and 960i in a 1080i frame, centered timings. That's what you're after, right?Josh128 wrote:I have a 36HS420 in my shop. Im currently using a 36FS210 in my gaming room.