So I had an old CRT TV with an RF only input that I got from my Grandma. At some point I might RGB mod it, but I'm really interested in a composite mod and then S-video.
Luckily, I was able to find a good
URL service manual for this model. When I opened the TV I then found the model numbers of the microcontroller and jungle chip.
Jungle Chip TDA8846
URL service manual
Microcontroller SAA5542PS
URL datasheet
So to preface off the bat, at this point, I don't have any mods working. So this will be a log of everything I
have tried, to no avail. I'd really appreciate any insight to be given as there seems to be less documentation here and on the internet overall regarding composite mods rather than RGB. Don't ask why I want composite/s-video over RGB, its essential to my setup.
I started by just soldering to the first composite input I saw, which was on pin 23 of the MCU. I assumed that this would somehow be sent out of the MCU into the jungle chip.
After no success with that basic approach, I postulated that the reason it didn't work was because I needed to tie the blanking pin on the jungle chip high in order for the composite signal I inputted into the MCU to be picked up by the jungle chip. I soldered in a blanking switch following the model done in The 8-Bit Guy's video. I lifted pin 35 out of its hole and soldered it to a toggle switch, with the common being the point it was originally soldered to, and the other throw being the supply voltage pin of the MCU, which according to the datasheet should be 3.3V. The switch seems to be working, as the RF static goes away when I flip the switch (black screen), but I can still see the channel number, volume display, and other OSD stuff. But still no signal from my composite input (a Gamecube).
Now I should mention something I didn't try, you can see in the image above the two wires for composite and ground (yes, I tested continuity with some other ground points around the board and with chassis grounds and they had continuity). I didn't lift the composite leg out of the PCB. Is it possible that this would have worked had I done that since some of the components the leg was connected to could have been messing with the signal?
At this point, I decided to move the composite input somewhere else on the board. I focused in on pin 13 of the jungle chip. It seems like this is where the demodulated RF (now composite) enters the jungle chip. It seems like it's also the default selected input as well. So I lifted the leg of pin 13 out of the hole and soldered the composite input in its place. As soon as I turned on the TV the background static was completely different than the standard RF static, even with nothing connected. Unfortunately though, this remained unchanged when I turned on the Gamecube. Just to be sure, I flipped the blanking switch (the background pattern went to black) and went through every channel, and also went through every channel with the blanking switch off. Nothing.
So this is where I stand currently. I could try soldering the composite to every possible pin on the schematic that mentions composite, but it's getting late and I don't have time for that so I decided to make this post and see what I'm missing here. According to the datasheet of the jungle chip, the Y input pin 11 serves as a composite pin as well, which would be the next one I'd think to try. Or, potentially lifting pin 38 of the jungle chip and soldering the composite there in its place. Any ideas of how I should proceed are much appreciated.