
*Baseball Stars 2 for AES is CIB.

OMG, that Sports DC is so minty. Congrats.sevin0seven wrote:traded about 90% of my old BST items and got these in return (from my local retro game stores):
*Baseball Stars 2 for AES is CIB.
Fragems wrote:Stereo Convertor for Sony Playstation Model PS-1 Playstation (NTSC) to Pal M TV(CIB). Found this to be quite interesting don't know why this would be in Ohio. If anyone knows its value or any information about it give me a heads up.
I didn't really see a use for it but it was $1 so it was a reflex buy.Was kind of thinking the same but dont have a Pal M tv to test it lol.Ziggy587 wrote:I'd speculate that since it just takes the composite video signal from the multi AV out, it probably works with the PS2 and PS3 as well.
Though useless in the NTSC market, a nice find to own due to its obscurity.Ziggy587 wrote:Ah, OK, makes more sense now. I didn't know where PAL M was, it's Brazil. Or "Brasil" apparently.![]()
So according to Wiki, "In Brazil, PAL is used in conjunction with the 525 line, 30 frame/s system M, using (very nearly) the NTSC colour subcarrier frequency. Almost all other countries using system M use NTSC. ... PAL-M signals are identical to North American NTSC signals, except for the encoding of the colour carrier. Therefore PAL-M will display in monochrome with sound on an NTSC set and vice versa. ... PAL-M being a standard unique to one country, the need of to convert it to/from other standards often arises. ... Conversion to/from NTSC is easy, as only the colour carrier needs to be changed. Frame rate and scan lines can remain untouched."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PAL-M
So it makes a lot more sense why such an adapter would exist. IIRC, Brazil imports a lot of NTSC stuff.
Also, you can test this on your NTSC TV. It'll just be in black and white.
edit: For $1, I totally would have bought it too! I would think it would only be useful to some one in Brazil, but it might not be too hard to sell in the BST section of game forums.
Last thought, since it seems like it just inputs composite video (and nothing unique to the PS1) than you could modify it to just accept composite video instead of the proprietary Playstation plug. That way, you'd be able to use it for pretty much any NTSC source and adapt it to PAL-M. At least, I assume so. It would make it easier to sell that way.

the asking price was $124.99. it's the US version too.mjmjr25 wrote:Nice get on the Baseball Stars 2 - what was your local shop asking for it?
Phoenix Games in concord? I know he had onesevin0seven wrote:the asking price was $124.99. it's the US version too.mjmjr25 wrote:Nice get on the Baseball Stars 2 - what was your local shop asking for it?
yep, you are correct Brad. the black Dreamcast is from 4Jays in case your wondering. One game I didn't include (forgot) on that pic is a CIB of Wings Arms for the Saturn.Bradtemple87 wrote:Phoenix Games in concord? I know he had onesevin0seven wrote:the asking price was $124.99. it's the US version too.mjmjr25 wrote:Nice get on the Baseball Stars 2 - what was your local shop asking for it?