@solidpro You'd be looking for basically a VGA(-like) set of signals, just with slightly different timings due to a higher frame refresh rate. Those signals are documented online, e.g. https://xess.com/blog/vga-the-rest-of-the-story/, the pinouts is on e.g. https://allpinouts.org/pinouts/connectors/computer_video/apple-macintosh-video-15-pin/.
So you'd be looking for the sync pulses (vertical and horizontal) on the separate and composite lines to see what exist (or not!) and looking at the colors to find the vertical blanking and if there's a pixel-clock-rated change of values; you should also see some sync pulses on the green line if the video outputs sync-on-green. The goal is just to see if the video output is alive. If there's no detectable synchronization or color signal, then the hardware has an issue. If one or more are missing, then maybe it's normal (i.e. no separate sync but composite sync or s-o-g is present), maybe it's a hw failure.
So you'd be looking for the sync pulses (vertical and horizontal) on the separate and composite lines to see what exist (or not!) and looking at the colors to find the vertical blanking and if there's a pixel-clock-rated change of values; you should also see some sync pulses on the green line if the video outputs sync-on-green. The goal is just to see if the video output is alive. If there's no detectable synchronization or color signal, then the hardware has an issue. If one or more are missing, then maybe it's normal (i.e. no separate sync but composite sync or s-o-g is present), maybe it's a hw failure.



