funny colour racketboy vga cable
funny colour racketboy vga cable
hi all. I've recently dug my retro collection out and wanted to hook my dc up to the tv using my vga lead I bought ages ago. but the screen now is messed up, I've done a quick google search and found the same issue listed on here in a dead thread from 2008, but the original poster is now none existant, so I come befor you gaming gods for help rather than jump onto a 7yr old thread hopefully attached is an image
- Attachments
-
- my screen is the same as this :-/
- image.jpeg (22.01 KiB) Viewed 736 times
Re: funny colour racketboy vga cable
I had a somewhat similar problem recently...
http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 17&t=49243
http://forums.nesdev.com/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=13164
To sum up the problem, the green signal seems to be missing entirely from the picture. I lost motivation to test further, but I believe it is the video encoder. I think the green output on the encoder is broken. A little Google'ing came up with a few threads on various forums that suggest that the DC video encoder going bad isn't uncommon.
Here's what I did: Test the DC using different cables (RF, composite or S-Video). If you STILL have the problem using a different video signal, then there might be something wrong with the GPU or video encoder. Or possibly just a dirty AV connection. If the problem is gone with a different video signal, then try using your DC and VGA cables on a different TV or monitor. If you STILL have the problem, try using your VGA cables on a different DC. This is how I found out that my VGA cables were fine, and the problem was with the DC itself.
Outside of that, I can't be much help. I never resolved the problem I was having.
http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 17&t=49243
http://forums.nesdev.com/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=13164
To sum up the problem, the green signal seems to be missing entirely from the picture. I lost motivation to test further, but I believe it is the video encoder. I think the green output on the encoder is broken. A little Google'ing came up with a few threads on various forums that suggest that the DC video encoder going bad isn't uncommon.
Here's what I did: Test the DC using different cables (RF, composite or S-Video). If you STILL have the problem using a different video signal, then there might be something wrong with the GPU or video encoder. Or possibly just a dirty AV connection. If the problem is gone with a different video signal, then try using your DC and VGA cables on a different TV or monitor. If you STILL have the problem, try using your VGA cables on a different DC. This is how I found out that my VGA cables were fine, and the problem was with the DC itself.
Outside of that, I can't be much help. I never resolved the problem I was having.