I bought a Japanese Sega Satrun on E-Bay from a very kind power seller; the console works perfectly, but I see all the images in black and white; the problem is that I use a PAL tv that does'nt support other standards; how coul'd I solve the problem?
Make it sense to try with an RGB scart cable? I'd like to know before I buy one on E-bay
I've had similar problems in the past with a JP Saturn displaying in black and white while using an RGB cable.
Just sell it, buy a PAL saturn, convert it to 60 hz and region mod it to the Japanese region (or buy a mod chip....) www.gamesx.com
There doesn't seem to be a real problem: stratos' current TV shows a picture (probably using a composite cable) but it's black and white. This means that (a) his TV can synchronize 60Hz and (b) his TV is a PAL TV (otherwise he'd have color). stratos doesn't need a new TV! The only thing you, stratos, need to check is whether or not one of your scart jacks is RGB capable. If yes, then a simple RGB cable will do the job! It's incorrect that you need a multistandard TV to use RGB scart in 60Hz (what good will PAL or NTSC do if you have an RGB signal that by nature isn't even coded in PAL or NTSC?)! Most modern TVs synchronize 60Hz without a problem. Only if your TV doesn't have an RGB capable scart jack, then then sven666 is right and you'd have to find a different TV or an NTSC -> PAL converter which probably will screw your picture up. What's the make and model of your TV?
I've ran JP Saturns from day 1 to current day on PAL TV's using RGB cables and it always worked fine for me.
Multisystem TV's don't even have scart sockets . A multisystem TV is one sold in Hong Kong that will take a PAL/SECAM or NTSC signal through all of its inputs.
Well, the term "multisystem" is used loosely usually. A PAL TV that accepts an NTSC signal through composite and Svideo is considered multisystem by some.
This industry has become 2 dimensional as it transcended into a 3D world.
neorichieb1971 wrote:I've ran JP Saturns from day 1 to current day on PAL TV's using RGB cables and it always worked fine for me.
Multisystem TV's don't even have scart sockets . A multisystem TV is one sold in Hong Kong that will take a PAL/SECAM or NTSC signal through all of its inputs.
Well, the term "multisystem" is used loosely usually. A PAL TV that accepts an NTSC signal through composite and Svideo is considered multisystem by some.
Yes a multisystem is a NTSC tv that also accepts PAL formats, but usually still doesn't even have RGB SCART inputs. And yes, here in Europe most tv's can already handle NTSC signals. But some don't and that sucks. Hardcore gamers should start a site about tv's and have a single thread for every tv. Like avforums, but this time from a gamers perspective.