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PAL question |
aaron - Jan 25, 2005 |
Drenholm | Jan 27, 2005 | |||
Running PAL optimised games correctly on an NTSC Saturn would require the use of NTSC50 (NTSC, but 25 frames - 50 half frames - per second). I don't know about the popularity of that format - it could be hit and miss. I do know, however, that 60Hz PAL (PAL60/PAL 4.43) is becoming more widely supported and new consoles offer a choice of 50/60Hz, so us Europeans are getting some luck in this respect at last! Formula Karts must be one of the optimised games, as has already been said. Anyway, good luck! |
Shakey Jake33 | Jan 27, 2005 | |||
I was under the impression that the Saturn could not output either NTSC-50 or PAL60... the switch would allow straight PAL, or straight NTSC, and that's it. |
Drenholm | Jan 27, 2005 | |||
Nah, PAL Saturns always send PAL colour carrier signals, and vice versa with NTSC. The 50/60Hz switch will just change the scanning frequency; the actual colour carrier type is controlled by the video processor, and cannot be changed from PAL to NTSC or the other way round, unless of course you feel like transplanting a video chip. Wow; I'm surprising myself! I hardly know anything about the Saturn or TV types, but I feel really clever now! |
ExCyber | Jan 27, 2005 | ||||
It's the encoder that controls color encoding, not video processor. The particular chip is the Sony CXA1645, and it's located near the output connector. It can output either PAL or NTSC, but I think some of the external components are different values for PAL and NTSC, so I doubt you can just tack a mode pin high/low and have it work right. |
Drenholm | Jan 27, 2005 | |||
My mistake there; thanks, ExCyber. Hopefully, I almost got it right! What I meant to put across was the point that there is no easy way to change between PAL and NTSC - a switch would just control the scanning rate. It's actually easier for Europeans to fit a 50/60Hz switch in their Saturn, from what I gather - PAL60 is more popular and supported than NTSC50, is it not? |
Shakey Jake33 | Jan 28, 2005 | |||
I'd say 95% of todays TV's in the UK support PAL60... And about 90% support NTSC as long as it's running through a decent connection like RGB SCART. You'd be *very* unlucky to end up with a TV that doesn't support PAL60 or NTSC. |
antime | Jan 28, 2005 | |||
If you're using RGB you're using RGB and not any encoding scheme like NTSC. |
Shakey Jake33 | Jan 28, 2005 | ||||
Yeah I know. I don't know the technical side of it all, I just know using an RF lead or AV cable to display NTSC on a PAL TV generally leads of a black and white or rolling display, which is fixed by picking up an RGB Scart cable. |
antime | Jan 28, 2005 | |||
That's because those TVs don't understand NTSC, but feeding a straight RGB signal works on most TVs, even at 60Hz. |
aaron | Jan 30, 2005 | |||
well shucks. i'll check out my TV. anybody have any 50/60 switch resources while i'm asking newbie questions? thanks! |