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What is the Resolution Depth on 68K Video?

Elfen

68020
I finally figured out on one of my Mac to VGA Adapter how to get other resolution settings on a specific switch setting on the adapter. Thing is this, it does not say what the resolution size it, the choices are:

Macintosh High Resolution Display

640X480 or 640X400 (depending on the switch settings)

Macintosh Portrait Display

What are the Macintosh High Resolution Display and Macintosh Portrait Display resolutions? They are definitely "bigger" than 640X480 setting but their sizes are not stated.

 
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It's from an LC III motherboard with a full load of VRAMand the Apple 8/24bit video card on the IIfx.

I notice that on 640X480 that the desktop image is smaller on the screen with large test and icons, but on the other modes the screen is wider and taller, with the text and icons being smaller but the same style. I think it's doing 800X600.

Also the color depth is different. On 640X480, it gives me Thousands or Millions of colors while on the other resolution it gives me only 256 colors.

 
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Its a Multi-Sync CRT Monitor - the Gateway EV700.

The adapter is a no-name brand with a dial on it with letters A - P and Dip Switches 1 - 9 though maybe 5 of those switches work; like V-Sync, H-Sync, Composite (Pins 7 - 9) and couple of others (1, 4 & 5). On the dial selections G, J, L, and M work on both machines, with those mentioned dip switches set to on.

 
Sounds to me like it has a picture of the Liberty Bell in the center of the dial?

If so: switches 1-6 off - switches 7-9 on

Dial - Resolution - Output

D - 1024 x 768 - 19" Color

F - 832 x 624 - 16" Color

G - 640 x 480/800 x 600 - VGA/SVGA

H - PAL - PAL

J - 640 x 480 - 13"/14" RGB

L - NTSC - NTSC

M - 1152 x 870 - Apple 2 Page Mono

N - 512 x 384 - 12" RGB

O - 640 x 870 Apple Portrait

P - 1152 x 870 - 21" Color

 
I just got one of those really nice ViewSonic adapters.  Has dip switch settings for everything from 512x384 to 1600x1200. :)  Best of all it has all the settings molded into the back of the plastic case, so you'll always know how to set the switches.

 
I've got their VMAC-1 that does Multi-Res up to 1920x1080, but it lists 1600x1200 as Macintosh G3 Multi-Res?

I got a nice short one a long time ago that does 1600x1200 to hold for the day I finally got the right monitor/card combo. It seemed like that res put too much wear and tear on my "Classic 21" CRTs. The 22" Viewsonic does it fine, but when I got the Dell Ultra-Sharp 20" LCD, that became my main display.

If elfen has a Liberty Adapter, the tag must have fallen off the back

 
The Unimacfly is pretty good:

Mac_VGA.jpg.696ad23564e4524718ae917ee5a6c26a.jpg


Here's one on Ebay:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/251693498534

It's basically the viewsonic adapter mentioned above.  Doesn't have specific setting for beyond 1280 X 1024 I think, but does have "multi-res" settings, which should let you adjust the output beyond just the specified resolutions. 

 
That's just how the metal is, it's the result of a certain commercial controlled oxidation process that prevents corrosion, it creates multiple random surface oxide states for the metal, with each one being a different color, which ends up causing a sort of rainbow glitter effect. I haven't seen it used in quite some time, I think it has fallen out of favor.

 
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Huh. I've had devices with that treatment but don't think I've ever seen it make something so... purple. Maybe it's the lighting.

 
Oh yeah, the purple is just a bias created by the device taking the pic, it doesn't look that way IRL. I think whatever they were trying to take the pic with did the best is could with so many tiny dots of different colors and intensities on a refractive surface by giving it a purple hue. I would imagine the CMOS sensor was freaking out trying to deal with a surface like that.

 
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I think I had one of those Liberty Bell ones. It was an excellent device (when paired with a multisync CRT) for using with A/UX; MacOS on a Quadra is fine with using the "MultiSync" setting but A/UX seemed happier when it could read the sense signals and be told "this is what you have".

 
I've got a freakin' pile of VGA adapters of every sort from various parts lots that I've snagged over the years, including several of the one in trag's post, IIRC.

. . . but A/UX seemed happier when it could read the sense signals and be told "this is what you have".
That's cause it's older'n dirt and a UNIX kluge to boot! ;)

 
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