If by "correctly" you mean "in a grossly oversimplified way" then yes, approximately, but there are very likely to be enough exceptions in each category that it's dangerous/stupid/foolhardy to take state those bullet points as rules.So... do I understand these points correctly?
If you're thinking of the Poor Man's Greyscale Project, as documented on the Power Colour Classic sub-site over at Applefritter, it's always worth bearing in mind that, though he got it to work, kind of, in the end he found the results unsatisfactory and decided to use an off the shelf 9" VGA monitor, ie, a complete, known-good system of matching CRT, analog board and deflection yoke. It's not that great an example of success to take as inspiration. IIRC, he gave up on trying to get the image aligned and in focus after much struggle.* I know people have successfully driven compact 9" CRTs with the electronics from an Apple 12" Mono monitor.
And those are displays from the same manufacturer, where if anything, they would have had an incentive to use a common analog board and common components if possible, to save money. The fact that they didn't strongly suggests it's not in fact possible, or at the very least feasible.Ball-brand CRT monitors from 1977 / the same manual covered the 5", 9", and 12" versions of the display
Gotta agree. One of the things I learned - right here in fact, a few years back - by brainfarting some of my own hack ideas, was that there's a certain level where the questions I need to ask indicate that I probably don't know enough to even try the hack. Now, stuff at logic level and under 12V DC isn't going to kill anyone, but CRTs? Imma do a heck of a lot more reading before I start messing with those things.This is analog shiznet pretty much black-magic to anyone who hasn't been trained in the art of TV repair
Heck, I exploded a PC handheld document scanner thing once by plugging it into a Mac ADB port, and there's only four pins and 5V at play there.confusing, say, PC parallel ports with Mac SCSI ports because they happen to use the same connectors / look at the "matching pins" on the back of CRT tube and just "try it"
Roger, and I do apologize. My impatience with the "summary as presented" was simply due to, well... and please don't take the personally MinerAl, is that the entire thought-process behind it is wrongheaded, IE, it's applying "tinkertoy" logic to analog electronics and dangerous "here there be dragons" ones at that. It's an easy mistake for a novice to make, I've made it myself. (Granted not with anything *electronic* quite so dangerous._In that spirit, [mod hat] I would ask once again for everyone here *coughGorgonops* to exercise a tad less snark please and thankyou.
And it should be added, a logic board with VGA-compatible video output, rather than trying to adapt a classic Mac's internal video signals to VGA.If you're thinking of the Poor Man's Greyscale Project / it's always worth bearing in mind that / in the end he / decided to use an off the shelf 9" VGA monitor
If the TRS scans at a similar rate, and has a similar number of lines of vertical resolution (342 lines for the mac), and the same page refresh rate (60Hz) you might be in with a shot. It won't be plug and play by any means, but it would mark it out as possible, with some signal adaption.johnklos said:compact Macs put out 22.3 kHz, if I remember correctly. EGA is 21.8 kHz, which is close enough that it should work
As I noted earlier, it doesn't. The monitors are essentially NTSC. (15.whatever khz.) When used in the Model 4 the monitor is tuned peculiarly so what would usually be the overscan area is crammed down to be visible on the screen (because the 4 uses 240 of the theoretical 252 available non-interlaced lines vs. the more typical 192 the III does, which is why III software looks a little "squished" when run on a 4), but, yeah, nowhere close to Mac resolution/refresh rates. You would need to find the service manual for the actual monitor parts *used in a particular Model III/4* to determine the likelyhood of success for making the analog board accept a higher refresh rate. And on that topic:If the TRS scans at a similar rate, and has a similar number of lines of vertical resolution (342 lines for the mac),
The display is sharp and clear
Whoops, sorry I didn't catch that before. Yeah that is way too far from the Mac's 22.x kHz for reusing the existing TRS analog board.The monitors are essentially NTSC. (15.whatever khz.)
Yeah, I was wondering where you'd read a followup that said more than that, but this "success" doesn't negate the general point that it's not something you can count on.Huh, re-reading the PMGS, seems my memory was playing tricks with me:
Interlaced? Because there are a very small number of video cards for old-Macs that output to TV. I have an LC PDS one kicking around here someplace.The monitors are essentially NTSC. (15.whatever khz.)
Well, it's not composite either so a "TV adapter" would have to be hacked to intercept separate Hsync/Vsync/video signals before they're mixed and knocked down from TTL levels. (Not a huge deal if you had the schematic and it was discrete components, but could be an issue if it's an ASIC.) Also, they're *TTL*, IE, black-and-white and I imagine an LC PDS card produces color/grayscale. That means more hacking either the card or the monitor circuitry. (And if the card uses an integrated analog DAC then you're probably stuck attacking the monitor side or setting up a crude one-bit ADC to compress an analog luminance signal down to digital.)Interlaced? Because there are a very small number of video cards for old-Macs that output to TV. I have an LC PDS one kicking around here someplace.
That schematic lines up with the need for inverters on H/Vsync noted in the mactech PDF. EGA is *almost* the same as the compact Mac when it comes to frequencies so I'd venture at least a plurality of EGA monitors could probably take the signals from this without further hacking. But, again, TRS-80 isn't even close to EGA.EGA Adapter
I always thought compacts were supposed to have a bit of margin around the edges. He could have perhaps pulled the vertical in some and called it good.in the text for the PMGSP he admits that he never quite got the geometry right because he "used up" all the available range, IE: "The display is sharp and clear, but fails to use the full width of the screen...", in the adjustment available on the mono monitor's board, and the pictures do seem to back up that it's a little vertically stretched.
Given that, thisis also fairly notorious for being sort of marginally spec'ed for the job
is a very good point.the additional load from driving a bigger CRT might badly shorten its lifespan.
Quite so. Heck, get an old 12" VGA monitor - or a new LCD - and one of those Chinese EGA/CGA to VGA converters.there are still other sources for monochrome CRTs (mono monitors, 12" B&W TVs, etc)
I've seen schematics around for sync separators (extracting sync from composite (I mean, that's what TVs do internally after all)) but I don't offhand recall where, or what parts they used, or how complex they were. There's probably an IC for it these days.a "TV adapter" would have to be hacked to intercept separate Hsync/Vsync/video signals before they're mixed
EvilTim's brightness / gain pot hack ;^)Also, they're *TTL* / an LC PDS card produces color/grayscale. That means more hacking either the card or the monitor circuitry.
No, and I don't in any sense mean to imply it is. Just wanted to post that schem for future reference and/or other attacks (eg, Mac -> EGA -> VGA -> newer monitor).But, again, TRS-80 isn't even close to EGA.