|
Post by sakharov on Apr 19, 2017 7:36:25 GMT -5
Switch the neck boards and everything ok now,but...(there is always a but with crt)...trying to set the image I cannot overlap the crosshair. What ever adjustment I cannot overlap it vertically. The blue and the red cross are always lower...Meanwhile I've also noticed that when the sockets are physically positioned for the front selling position the menu indicates back table...what the hell.!!!
Any ideas?
|
|
|
Post by Casethecorvetteman on Apr 19, 2017 21:53:44 GMT -5
Even an old 7 series quad will work in a CineMAX. His set is a CineMAX, essentially the same as a Cine 9, and very simular in many ways to a 909, but not exactly the same. Thanks Casey I am surprised that they are a straight swap but there you go. So was i, but all the types ive tested worked fine.
|
|
|
Post by Casethecorvetteman on Apr 19, 2017 21:54:51 GMT -5
Switch the neck boards and everything ok now,but...(there is always a but with crt)...trying to set the image I cannot overlap the crosshair. What ever adjustment I cannot overlap it vertically. The blue and the red cross are always lower...Meanwhile I've also noticed that when the sockets are physically positioned for the front selling position the menu indicates back table...what the hell.!!! Any ideas? You have the yokes connected wrong.
|
|
|
Post by sakharov on Apr 24, 2017 9:40:09 GMT -5
Ok guys, thanks to the suggestions of you all the Cinemax is working great. Meanwhile on my initial test at 1080p with bluray and the adapter fury 3 I've a vertical band on the left side of the image. Any insides on this?
|
|
|
Post by stridsvognen on Apr 24, 2017 10:17:44 GMT -5
Ill guess its raster ringing, if so it should move out of the image if you use the horizontal phase shift, im not sure how it works on the Barco, but you might be able to reduce or remove it by shifting the image as far right as possible with the phase shift, and then center it again with static convergence, if that wont do it, you need a processor where you can adjust the porch timings. I tested a lot of the different converters and processors, and posted the results here.. www.avforums.com/threads/best-hdmi-to-rgbhv-converters-for-analog-displays.2023323/#post-23486674
|
|
|
Post by Casethecorvetteman on Apr 29, 2017 0:59:30 GMT -5
Ill guess its raster ringing, if so it should move out of the image if you use the horizontal phase shift, im not sure how it works on the Barco, but you might be able to reduce or remove it by shifting the image as far right as possible with the phase shift, and then center it again with static convergence, if that wont do it, you need a processor where you can adjust the porch timings. I tested a lot of the different converters and processors, and posted the results here.. www.avforums.com/threads/best-hdmi-to-rgbhv-converters-for-analog-displays.2023323/#post-23486674Close to that yes, but there is a coarse raster shift setting to re-centre. I set the phase at about 17-18 for standard 1920x1080p 60Hz timings, any further to the right and you start getting distorted lines at the right edge. Im using an internal MOOME though so it may not be the same settings. The left edge is a problem with standard timings on a Barco.
|
|
|
Post by sakharov on May 12, 2017 6:45:44 GMT -5
Would a Crystallio scaler solve this?
|
|
|
Post by stridsvognen on May 12, 2017 8:21:56 GMT -5
The Crystalio is not a high quality scaler, it will do any timings you wish as long as you remain below a 165Mhz pixel clock, and if i remember right you can fairly easy do a 817P 60 or 72hz profile on it.
Just be mindfull that adding to the H total rise the pixel clock, so you will trade one thing for another, unless you lets say do a 817P 60hz, around 122Mhz at H total 2400.
Then comes the processors degradation of the signal quality, and i doubt the Crystalio will pass 8bit graduation, so you will most likely add a slight amount of banding, and croma resolution suffer quite some.
The only processor that i know will do a very good job at it is the Lumagen Radiance, if setup right, and turning off features/ processes that degrade the material. In the end all that matters is what you can accept, and your preferences.
|
|