I purchased the actual box from this site along with a VGA cable. It extended the length quite nicely and reaches my TV with no problem, as well as leaving S-Video an option in case I run into a game that won't work with VGA.
Would they connect properly? Because the VGA cable in racketBOY's store has this end:
You will need a male to male VGA cable to hook it to your TV yes. Monitors generally have the cable attached to them, thus the bit on the box is short. A trip to a computer store or a visit to Newegg.com or Monoprice.com should sort you out.
Hobie-wan wrote:You will need a male to male VGA cable to hook it to your TV yes. Monitors generally have the cable attached to them, thus the bit on the box is short. A trip to a computer store or a visit to Newegg.com or Monoprice.com should sort you out.
Ah, that makes sense! I never realized monitors already had them attached -- Thanks!
I have a question. I just bought a VGA box from eBay and I'm pretty happy with how the picture looks on my 26 inch LCD tv, but the problem is I have the vertical lines going down the screen everyone is talking about. They aren't terrible or anything, just a bit annoying. I got the Komodo brand one (with Retro Bit packaging). I was wondering if the same issue occurs one Racket Boy sells.
Amplibax wrote:I have a question. I just bought a VGA box from eBay and I'm pretty happy with how the picture looks on my 26 inch LCD tv, but the problem is I have the vertical lines going down the screen everyone is talking about. They aren't terrible or anything, just a bit annoying. I got the Komodo brand one (with Retro Bit packaging). I was wondering if the same issue occurs one Racket Boy sells.
A pic? I suspect its the LCD dot crawl. See my CRT vs LCD signature link.
Thanks for the response. Here's a couple pictures of what I'm talking about. The lines are especially noticeable during black loading screens and whatnot.
Maybe turn off the wide screen setting if possible? Dreamcast is designed to display on a 4:3 screen. I think the LCD is trying to compensate by stretching the image resulting in those lines.