It said 14" RGB monitor and was covered in beautiful yellow plaque.


How would I go about interfacing to RGBs or Scart on this?
I found little info online
Model CTX 1410
They are indeed limited to a palette of 16 colors. Digital RGB cannot be adapted to BNC like thatHoagtech wrote: ↑Wed Sep 27, 2023 9:26 pm I was afraid of that.
Im pretty sure with the Monochrom switch modes this will not be a VGA+ monitor.
I heard some CGA sets are limited to low color pallets and are not compatible with 15KHZ Rgbs signal.
If anyone knows of an adaptor solution. I would love to use this as a multipurpose Gameboy / RGBs machine
Could I use a 9-pin to RGBs BNC or does it not work like that?
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Judging from the color and wear on that thing, chances are the tube is going to be pretty worn out. Before attempting anything like that, I would first hook it up to an RGBI source and see how much it's possible to push the contrast before it starts to bloom
Where can I find more information about this sorcery?orange808 wrote: ↑Thu Sep 28, 2023 7:15 pm You have to mod a CGA monitor.
Technically there is a "DAC" circuit on CGA monitors (not to be confused with the misuse of the term "CGA" among arcade cabinet enthusiasts). You have to bypass that circuit.
The reason you can't use an adapter in front of the display is simple: the colors are "hardcoded" in that "DAC" circuit inside the monitor. You'd have to force the colors of your source to match the 16 available colors on a CGA monitor. (Yes, the standard supports more colors than a CGA machine usually put on screen.)
All I can offer is breadcrumbs. You'll have to sort out the internals of your specific monitor with some extremely careful investigation. Please take extra care, it's dangerous in there...
Yellowed plastic doesn't say much about the monitor internals. It really depends on the individual display.bobrocks95 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 2:01 pm I get the appeal of weird tech but you can get a 14 CRT PC monitor and combine it with a linedoubler and not have to mess with the internals of a beat up horribly yellowed probably won't work with analog display.
I got the impression that getting it to work with analog signals is still a very questionable "maybe". Just wouldn't get my hopes up.orange808 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 6:47 pmYellowed plastic doesn't say much about the monitor internals. It really depends on the individual display.bobrocks95 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 2:01 pm I get the appeal of weird tech but you can get a 14 CRT PC monitor and combine it with a linedoubler and not have to mess with the internals of a beat up horribly yellowed probably won't work with analog display.
If it has low usage hours, it should display 240p consoles and a lot of arcade PCB's very well.
Modding a good CGA monitor makes a lot of sense, because you can get analog input and buy external adapters to feed IBMPC CGA, Laser 128, and Commodore 128 signals.
Its mainly Aesthetics for me. You cant replace a perfectly funky and boxy look with a 90's monitor. Also newer VGA's require Scalers like you mentioned and don't have native 240p support. Generally speaking. These monitors are razor sharp for command line usage for corporate tasks.bobrocks95 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 29, 2023 2:01 pm I get the appeal of weird tech but you can get a 14 CRT PC monitor and combine it with a linedoubler and not have to mess with the internals of a beat up horribly yellowed probably won't work with analog display.
I think at this point, you should A) move this to it's own thread and/or B) move this to the RGB mod thread
...?Steven wrote:DB15 because those are what my CRT and PC monitor accept.