> On Jan 19, 2019, at 4:38 PM, Paul Koning <paulkon...@comcast.net> wrote:
> 
>> On Jan 19, 2019, at 1:57 PM, Warner Losh via cctalk <cctalk@classiccmp.org> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> Greetings,
>> 
>> I'm trying to find a way to get my DEC Rainbow's monochrome output onto a
>> newer monitor than my aging VR201 (especially since I zapped something in
>> it and my diagnostic efforts to date haven't fixed it).
>> ...
> 
> I'd be interested in the answer also, for my Pro.

Digging in old email...

I've looked at this some more the other day.  Two observations.

1. The "mono" video output from the Pro is a valid composite video signal, no 
surprise there.
2. For color signals, the approach I'm going to try in the near future is to 
convert to "component video".  That's a trivial analog process, see 
https://www.analog.com/en/design-center/reference-designs/circuit-collections/lt6550-rgb-to-ypbpr-component-video-conversion.html
 for example.

The reason this seems like a good approach is that component video inputs of 
typical TV sets support "480i" signals, which is what the Pro produces.  
Contrast that with VGA, which is effectively 480p (no interlace, 2x the 
horizontal frequency) so producing that is a much harder job.

If you can change the color mapping, you could even just feed an RGB signal 
directly to a component video input, with G going to Y (assuming you have sync 
on green) and R/B going to Pr/Pb with a bias in the color map entries to make 
the result right.  Haven't tried that either.

        paul

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