- Joined
- Oct 1, 2013
- Posts
- 5,156
Gents,
I have a Bandridge Manual 5-way SCART switcher, and the S-Video input on the front has been finnicky. It's always been this way, but I have noticed this more and more.
The issue is that the Scart to HDMI upscaler detects the signal as "SCART AV", however I need to play with the cable for a bit to get it to display as "SCART SVID" and become clearer. If this doe snot occur, the image has artifacts and rainbow-y effects that are distracting. Sometimes there's no picture altogether.
I use the S-Video for N64, Gamecube, and PC Engine mostly, and I have tried several cables that work fine on other TVs but not through this one. I don't have any Tv's that have Svideo inputs directly in them within my house, so its either this or directly connect via composite, which looks like shit.
Anyone else have these issues? What do you do to fix them? I'm about to just RGB mod my N64 just to have it use the same cable as the SNES and avoid this issue, but im sure that won't help the GC and PC Engine issues.
I have a Bandridge Manual 5-way SCART switcher, and the S-Video input on the front has been finnicky. It's always been this way, but I have noticed this more and more.
The issue is that the Scart to HDMI upscaler detects the signal as "SCART AV", however I need to play with the cable for a bit to get it to display as "SCART SVID" and become clearer. If this doe snot occur, the image has artifacts and rainbow-y effects that are distracting. Sometimes there's no picture altogether.
I use the S-Video for N64, Gamecube, and PC Engine mostly, and I have tried several cables that work fine on other TVs but not through this one. I don't have any Tv's that have Svideo inputs directly in them within my house, so its either this or directly connect via composite, which looks like shit.
Anyone else have these issues? What do you do to fix them? I'm about to just RGB mod my N64 just to have it use the same cable as the SNES and avoid this issue, but im sure that won't help the GC and PC Engine issues.