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Looking to buy a Saturn and have a few questions |
MiaBocca - Jan 4, 2004 |
Jaded God | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
well first off 60hz = NTSC, 50hz = PAL Second, there are numerous ways you could do this. Make sure that you get a model 2 saturn, preferabbly a 21/32 pin IC. It is the easiest and most compatible saturn to mod. 64 pins can give trouble... You can easily patch games via a program such as "Satconvd" aka Saturn Country Code Converter. It is available in the Help + FAQ section. Using this you can patch the iso to your own region. I would just do that, but you could also install a switch for 50hz/60hz. There are documents all over for that one, just google it. DJoeN's site might be of valuable use to you since you are in the UK. His guides are for 50 hz stuff. http://users.skynet.be/DuNe/djoen.html... He has the switch mod on his site. I hope I helped a bit. |
MiaBocca | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
Thanks for the ver quick reply. Which model is a model 2 - that is, how can I tell from the outside? Yes, the 50/60hz think - I can play DC and Gamecube games on the 60hz option no problem, so I presume the TV can display 60hz fine, but not NTSC. |
IBarracudaI | Jan 4, 2004 | ||||
Model2 saturns have round power and reset buttons, and dont have the cdrom access led, like model1s have. Edit: Model1s have oval power and reset buttons |
axelblazeadam | Jan 4, 2004 | ||||
Actually there's PAL60 which is different to NTSC. Many PAL Dreamcast games have a 60Hz mode and the DC outputs PAL60 which is supported on most newish TV's .The GC and Xbox do the same. The PS2 outputs NTSC for any 60Hz modes which can leave you with a black and white screen for non NTSC compatible TV's. If your TV supports PAL60, use of a RGB Scart cable should allow a NTSC signal to work in full colour. |
Jaded God | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
lol I knew you guys would say something about that... Generally 50 hz is PAL and you know this. |
MiaBocca | Jan 4, 2004 | ||||
Really? That's interesting. So it might be worth going for a white Jap Saturn and getting a step-down converter? |
axelblazeadam | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
Using an RGB cable worked for my PS2 back when I had a TV that didnt support NTSC so it I dont see why it wouldn't work for other consoles. |
Sane | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
Yes, using an RGB scart cable will work fine, my NTSC US saturn works great on my PAL tv with it. |
Waren Al'Kar | Jan 4, 2004 | |||
It must have to do with the way it seperates the colour signal. I wonder whether the same works for composite RGB too. |
Scared0o0Rabbit | Jan 5, 2004 | |||
composite and rgb are 2 seperate things. RGB doesn't use the whole ntsc/pal thing. |
Waren Al'Kar | Jan 5, 2004 | |||
Sorry about the confusion, I meant the Red/Green/Blue RCA cables that you can use with some TV sets. |
mal | Jan 5, 2004 | |||
Wouldn't those RCAs be for component video? |
Waren Al'Kar | Jan 5, 2004 | |||
Yeah. Component is what I meant. |
Alexvrb | Jan 5, 2004 | |||
Waren: Component isn't RGB at all. It's YPbPr, RCA color difference. At any rate, I don't think they use what we call "component" at all in Europe. But if they did, I'd assume it'd work fine for hooking up an NTSC console to a PAL60 TV. |
croft | Jan 6, 2004 | |||
Hi Mia Bocca Sorry to hear you no longer have the Sega Saturn unit. I can help you out. I also live in the UK and use a Sony tv for full screen gaming. Also on different machine models and formats. I can be contacted via email if you wish. Kind regards, Ian. |
Tagrineth | Jan 6, 2004 | ||||
Component CAN be RGB, though it isn't by default. My PS2 has an output selection in the system settings, for either YPbPr or RGB... and my TV has input selection. =) |