Showing posts with label Rainbow Islands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rainbow Islands. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Fernseher aus Berlin - Nr. 5

Well, I've been in Berlin for over three weeks now and I've already got too much too report... already falling behind with sharing my discoveries here.

I've collected five SCART TVs so far but I'm not going to start my Berlin with TV #1. Instead, I'll start where I'm currently working...

I picked up this (apparently) defective Loewe for it's tube only. This is a 100 Hz television and you're about to see why 100 Hz processing sucks dogs balls when it comes to retrogaming. However, the tubes used in the later model Loewes are stellar when combined with an older, analog chassis.

Before I gut this unit and chunk all but the tube, I figured I'd take the opportunity to show exactly why 100 Hz is so damn awful.

Before we get to the nasty stuff, here are some details on the unit in questions:

Loewe. Profil 3570 Z
100 Hz/Blackline
Chassis type: Q4400
Tube sticker
Tube type: A66EAK552X54
Also, I should mention that the collection of this SCART television was rather memorable. I turned up at Micheal's house (the eBay seller) with my hand cart, ready to cart this thing back on the subway. Instead, Michael loaded the TV, my trolley and myself into his car and drove me across Berlin back to my apartment. What an awesome guy!

Okay, now let my try to explain the worst that 100 Hz processing has to offer...

Red on Black

This is probably the most obvious place to start when going on a 100 Hz hate fest.

In the following example, I photographed the Taito logo from Rainbow Islands with 9 different color settings (i.e. the color balance setting in the TV's picture menu). I started with color at minimum (value of 0) and worked up to the maximum (value of 63) in steps of 8. As you'll see, the greater the color intensity, the greater the visual distortion of the Taito logo.

Note: I placed a small sticker on the glass of the tube and focused my camera at this point for each image. You can see the sticker stays in focus, assuring you that my camera wasn't simply out of focus in the later images.

Color = 00
Color = 07
Color = 15
Color = 23
Color = 31
Color = 39
Color = 47
Color = 55
Color = 63
Ouch! What a mess!

Now, did you notice how the white "CORPORATION" text stayed crisp while the red became over saturated and distorted? It took me a long time to realise that the artifacts created by by 100 Hz processing where exacerbated by the color balance setting. Later I discovered that the color balance on most SCART TVs doesn't have any effect on the incoming RGB signal. In my mind, this is a good thing. The signal passes untouched.

So, with the color set to a low value, the image is sharp and not too distorted. The problem is, of course, that then the image looks washed out and loses that classic CRT vibrancy.

When I first started out with an 80+ cm Loewe unit with a Q4400 it was very frustrating to see these artifacts. I thought maybe my my particular unit was defective or there was something wrong with my homemade VGA to SCART cable. As it was pointed out to me on a forum, the problem lies with the 100 Hz processing.

Further examples

Next, let's check out a random assortment of gruesome 100 Hz pixel murders, starting with a bunch of Rainbow Island examples:

Note the "Focus!" sticker... it's sharp! Also, white stays true.
Red on Black = Disaster
Everything is going wrong here...
Oh my... look at the ghosting!
Compare the clarity of the white text compared with the manic colors
Notice the random lines coming from the A and D characters?!
More icky red text
Check out the color distortion in the text!
Observe the distorted rainbow
Willow's title text suffering from 100 Hz processing
Check out the edges of the "Game Over" rectangle...
Street Fighter II loses its crispness
We could go on all night finding more disastrous examples of this kind of built-in image processing. It's a real shame because the focus, stability and overall clarity of this TV is amazing.

Conclusion

100 Hz. Don't do it! Unless the 100 Hz television your neighbor is giving away also has a VGA port (which would most likely bypass this digital processing debacle) or has a tube your want to plunder, say "thanks but no thanks". It's just not worth the disappointment.

And, it gets worse. The images I've shown are bad enough but seeing what this processing does to animation is just awful... I'll see if I can capture some video for a future installment.

Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Why 100 Hz sux

One of the things I learnt early on in the SCART hunt is that CRTs with 100 Hz processing can never fully recapture the classic arcade look. There are just too many image artifacts that end up niggling the CRT perfectionist.

Searching through my files, I found a couple images that show exactly what I'm talking about:

Street Fighter III - red on black is a mess!
Rainbow Islands - this game is a disaster with 100 Hz!
These images are from a Loewe Profil Plus with a Philips A68ESF type tube. Great looking TV with an amazing tube! One of the sexiest out there. Beautiful semi-flat design and amazing contrast. However, check out that text in Street Fighter III! That image isn't out of focus (check the edge of the TV casing... it's in focus), but the 100 Hz chassis just murders the image.

Such a shame...

Monday, 19 November 2012

Regrets... I've had a few!

I was looking through my jumbo folder of SCART Hunter resources and found some photos of a lovely little number that I had in my possession for a brief time. I found this Blaupunkt on the nature strip during an epic hard rubbish hunt. Same chassis type as my other Blaupunkts (Grundig CUC 5630) but with a smaller screen. Looking back, it was pretty foolish to get rid of this little ripper! The improved focus and definition of a smaller tube is quite noticeable compared to the larger A66EAK tubes that are in most of the TVs I've still got.

Back when my TV collection numbered 25+, something drastic had to happen and so this little Blaupunkt was one of the first to go in the effort to reclaim some living space. When I made that call I had no idea that I'd come to think that analog chassis TVs were the ultimate way to go. In fact, I can remember thinking this TV was useless because it had no service menu to adjust the geometry! Foolish! Oh well... live and learn!

Front
Back
SCART port
Blaupunkt IS 63-33 VT (chassis FM 310.32)
Final Fight
Golden Axe
Metal Slug
Street Fighter II
Rainbow Islands

Sunday, 12 August 2012

Siemens up close

Handed the mega Siemens FS 247 V6 over to a worthy recipient today.

With two grown men on the job the stair climb wasn't too bad. We opened up the casing and cleaned out years of dust with my trusty air compressor. Discovered some interesting repair work that involves some funky trace patching. Guess this thing got too hot for its own good somewhere along the line!

Fiddled with the focus pot a bit and wiped down the screen. This TV really is pretty exceptional: huge visible area and lovely image quality.

Anyway, it's on its way to a new home now! Lucky for this TV it'll have a second life instead of heading to land fill.

Siemens FS 247 V6
Rear view
Multi colour SCART ports!
Patched traces
Hole
Toshiba A76KJJ96X08
P-47
Rainbow Islands
Shinobi
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
R-Type Leo