Yes, it does the same thing. However, TROT works in smaller increments so it's easier to fine tune - sometimes you get a TV where the "sweet spot" is in between 2 "tilt" settings.Taiyaki wrote:Does the TROT do similarly as the TILT in the settings?
In the past when I've experienced this I pushed the tilt to +5 (or maybe it was -5) which was the point where the interference was at it's smallest (near gone), and then tilted the yoke manually like you did. Picture is very clean, but in some very rare instances I can still make out some near invisible interference going through.
I find that usually, the yoke is oriented correctly to begin with. Unplugging the tilt coil means you can tweak TROT as much as you want and, most of the time, you won't have to mess with the yoke.
I've only ever seen the tilt-related interference in 1st-gen BA-6 Trinitron (FS100) models. I've never seen it in BA-5/5Ds or on second-generation BA-6 (FS120 etc).kitty666cats wrote:Hmm, does this apply to the BA-5D as well? I’m assuming “no”/you would have specified if so (I used to have a KV-32FS100 and haven’t encountered this or heard about it)
Jittery component video is present on BA-5/5D and BA-6. The OSD doesn't suffer from this, though. This is one reason why RGB modding a BA-5/5D does serve a purpose; the OSD doesn't suffer from this issue and it also avoids the various edge enhancement "features". As such, the RGB mod does produce a noticeably cleaner picture than the component inputs.