Anyone with an n64 needs to go back and play Yoshi's Story. It hasn't aged a day, and is in my opinion by far the best looking game on the entire console.
It's absolutely gorgeous and would easy pass for a game released today. Through RGB it's stunning.
richisawesome, do you have Ogre Battle 64? I wonder how that looks in RGB.
richisawesome, do you have Ogre Battle 64? I wonder how that looks in RGB.
Since I "threatened" I'd be back, figured I'd try here first before jumping into the Saturn thread. I have a NTSC Saturn (MK-80000A) and the SCART cable I purchased from Retro Console Accessories back when they had a website. (Sega Saturn stereo RGB SCART cable for NTSC model Saturn). I was planning on connecting that to the XRGB Mini with the RGB adapter it came with. Will that work? Will I also get audio that way? I don't want to blow anything up... yet.
I know that when I bought it there was an option for Euro wiring or NTSC wiring, which I hoped meant JP21, but the page seems to have disappeared from the internet and the seller no longer seems to stock Saturn cables on eBay.Unless you specifically asked for a JP21 pin wiring on the saturn cable then dont plug it in the xrgb. Unless where you buy the cable specifically says its JP21 pin its likely wired for euro scart. You need a euro scart to JP21 converter before you plug it in the xrgb. And yes, youll get sound through it, unless they wired it with the female rca audio lines instead of running it through the scart connector.
I know that when I bought it there was an option for Euro wiring or NTSC wiring, which I hoped meant JP21, but the page seems to have disappeared from the internet and the seller no longer seems to stock Saturn cables on eBay.
OK, how can I tell the difference with one? And can you recommend one on Amazon? Thank you so much for your help thus far!That was likely for the console itself. Its a ntsc euro scart cable. You can always double check with a multimeter to be completely sure.
OK, how can I tell the difference with one? And can you recommend one on Amazon? Thank you so much for your help thus far!
Its entirely up to you how you want to do it, but i would recommend going with euro scart cables (seem to be easier to come across) and then something like this http://www.retrogamingcables.co.uk/european-scart-to-framemeister-xrgb-mini-converter-for-sale.html that way a euro scart cable can be used with the xrgb. I dont have an xrgb personally, and all my stuff is euro scart so that may sway me towards euro wiring. Theres others one here who would know where to find the jp21 pin cables, but i feel like i remember someone saying that a popular ebay seller (retro_console_accessories or something similar) would wire her cables as jp21 if you ask. Hope that helps some!
retrogamingcables.co.uk will also wire cables for JP21 - they have done so with all the RGB cables I have bought from them.
In that case it would be equally as easy to go with jp21 cables as long as you ask for them. I guess if youre using an xrgb and something like a selecty it would be easier to use the jp21 pin cables and keep everything uniform.
If you live in North America, then I don't see any point in getting SCART instead of JP21 if you have the option. No displays in the USA accept SCART input and all of the upscalers discussed here expect JP21.Its entirely up to you how you want to do it, but i would recommend going with euro scart cables (seem to be easier to come across) and then something like this http://www.retrogamingcables.co.uk/european-scart-to-framemeister-xrgb-mini-converter-for-sale.html that way a euro scart cable can be used with the xrgb. I dont have an xrgb personally, and all my stuff is euro scart so that may sway me towards euro wiring. Theres others one here who would know where to find the jp21 pin cables, but i feel like i remember someone saying that a popular ebay seller (retro_console_accessories or something similar) would wire her cables as jp21 if you ask. Hope that helps some!
If you live in North America, then I don't see any point in getting SCART instead of JP21 if you have the option. No displays in the USA accept SCART input and all of the upscalers discussed here expect JP21.
Never heard of JP21 until I started reading this thread.
Every single TV I've ever used, including my parent's new LED Panasonic, supports RGB SCART. Then again, I live in the UK. I guess thats one of the reasons why only the PAL Wii supports RGB SCART.
If you live in North America, then I don't see any point in getting SCART instead of JP21 if you have the option. No displays in the USA accept SCART input and all of the upscalers discussed here expect JP21.
If you live in North America, then I don't see any point in getting SCART instead of JP21 if you have the option. No displays in the USA accept SCART input and all of the upscalers discussed here expect JP21.
I've never seen any for sale in brick and mortar stores in my lifetime, so I'm not sure how you can qualify that statement unless you're referring to specific consoles. Ordering from one online outlet usually isn't any "easier" than another, and retro_console_accessories sells brand new Genesis, SNES, Neo Geo, and PS1/PS2/PS3 JP21 cables for ~$18, the same price they charge for SCART. I was able to track down official Saturn cables from a JP outlet for less than $30 shipped, which was still more than I would have liked to spend but personally worth it just to avoid clutter from having to pick up extra converters. There's also the theoretical possibility of signal loss that comes with adding more analog converters/switches to the chain, but I wouldn't expect that to be a reasonable concern in this case since SCART<>JP21 should be as simple as it gets technically speaking (just a pin re-mapping if I'm not mistaken).Yes but scart cables are still much easier to get in the states.
What's the best way to get rid of jaggies on a ps2?
I've got it hooked up to a 32" LCD with component at the moment, and I'm happy with the image pretty much except the jaggies.
I'm also not looking to spend a lot on it, if that's possible?
They're pretty much inherit to the system. They're there, no matter what you do.
Best bet? Use your PC to emulate them.
What's the best way to get rid of jaggies on a ps2?
I've got it hooked up to a 32" LCD with component at the moment, and I'm happy with the image pretty much except the jaggies.
I'm also not looking to spend a lot on it, if that's possible?
Best bet would be to drop the sharpness setting on the TV. You're not going to be able to make the game display in a higher resolution than intended on original hardware.
Q: There has been a lot of reference to up-converting/up-scaling and de-interlacing. Which of these best describes the HDTV Player?
A: Progressive mode and up-scaling best describe the method used by the Xploder HDTV Player.
Q: Does the device interpolate (or add pixels).
A: The Xploder HDTV Player does not interpolate. It works by enabling progressive scan output, so instead of sending half the lines per frame it sends all of them. This has noticeable improvements in movement, especially on HDTV sets; artefacts such as combing are no long present. The software does not create extra lines (or interpolate).
anyone tried updating their framemeister's firmware to 1.10 yet ? Is this an essential update over 1.07 ?
http://www.micomsoft.co.jp/xrgb-mini_download.htm
GameTech has a new video examining the NESRGB board. Gets into detail regarding power draw and stuff like that, but the great thing right off the bat is that he has no problem connecting a SNES multi-out port & using a SNES SCART cable.
Cannot wait to get mine back.
Just wanted to thank you for all your help in this thread, you saved me a potential headache! You were right on the money, checked the continuity today and it is indeed an NTSC SCART cable, not a JP21 cable. So that now means I can't use the cable that came with the Framemeister, right? I basically need this guy that you linked earlier: http://www.retrogamingcables.co.uk/european-scart-to-framemeister-xrgb-mini-converter-for-sale.htmlActually its probably easiest to just check for continuity between pins.
http://members.optusnet.com.au/eviltim/gamescart/gamescart.htm
Thats got the pinout for saturn on there.
I don't really know if I'm going to keep going with SCART, baby steps! I think for now I'm going to go with a breakout box, thank you for cluing me in to the option. Looks like this: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=200979482944 does exactly what I need, correct? The RGB adapter for the XRGB mini is JP-21 and I need to send audio directly to my receiver. My SCART cable is NTSC/Euro. Looks like this box allows both cables to work together and sends audio!Most SCART switches have an audio breakout. If you plan on having more than one RGB console you're better off buying one anyway.
Failing that, retro console accessories currently sells audio breakout boxes.
I don't really know if I'm going to keep going with SCART, baby steps! I think for now I'm going to go with a breakout box, thank you for cluing me in to the option. Looks like this: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=200979482944 does exactly what I need, correct? The RGB adapter for the XRGB mini is JP-21 and I need to send audio directly to my receiver. My SCART cable is NTSC/Euro. Looks like this box allows both cables to work together and sends audio!
You say a SNES SCART doesn't come cheap, but I bought one for my N64 for £3 on eBay. They're cheap as dirt.
Are they really that expensive in the US? Could always import from UK, maybe?
The SNES/SFC is uniquely weird in that it requires different RGB wiring depending on NTSC or PAL. Naturally there was never such as thing as an NTSC SCART cable, so you can only use custom-made ones.
Nintendo did make an official NTSC JP21 cable back then, but it's super rare and hard to find outside Japan.