I built a couple LED TV sets about ten years ago. I had to solve this
problem. I bought a sync separator chip for the first one, and a digitizer
chip for the other.
See the bottom of the page for schematics.
http://www.cathodecorner.com/satanvision/



On Sat, Apr 10, 2021, 6:04 AM jb-electronics <webmas...@jb-electronics.de>
wrote:

> Thank you! I did some more digging and found the service manual for the
> display (Panasonic TR-60S1A, see here:
> https://www.opweb.de/english/company/Panasonic/TR-60S1A)
>
> There is is a timing chart (see below). It looks an awful lot alike NTSC
> to me, can somebody confirm?
>
> Best wishes
> Jens
>
>
>
>
> On 2021-04-10 12:28 a.m., Adrian Godwin wrote:
>
> It's easy enough to extract the sync signals, as you've seen. It may not
> be particularly difficult to modify the TTL input to analog, or to create a
> TTL level signal if you don't need a grey-scale.  On many general-purpose
> monitors like that they could often be built for either standard - the
> microvitec Cub  popular with the BBC Microcomputer had that option.
>
> But the critical thing is that it runs at the right speed. CRT circuits
> are built around the line oscillator which generates the horizontal scan
> AND the EHT voltage. It was only when multisync monitors came along that
> the optimisation was split to reduce the dependency. And if the frame
> frequency is wrong, you will often have problems getting a full frame scan
> when you force it into sync.
>
> So the first thing is that you need to make sure the 8920 monitor ran at
> either PAL or NTSC rates so you can choose a raspberry pi format to match.
> There's a good chance it's NTSC but later monitors like the ones in the 54
> series of digital scopes were more like the IBM standards MDA and EGA (CGA
> was NTSC).
>
> On Sat, Apr 10, 2021 at 4:28 AM jb-electronics <
> webmas...@jb-electronics.de> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>>
>> This is a bit of an off-topic question, but I hope there will be
>> somebody here that can help. I have bought a new-old stock monochrome
>> CRT for a HP Agilent 8920A, basically this unit here:
>> https://www.ebay.com/itm/273930914548 .
>>
>> It looks to me that it is just a rebranded OmniVision 6" display:
>>
>> http://www.omnivisionusa.com/Industrial-LCD-CRT-Monitors/replacement-crt/crt-monitors/6-inch-kit-.html
>>
>> Now unfortunately it takes TTL video as input. But I have a composite
>> source (a Raspberry Pi). How can I convert composite into TTL? I
>> basically need to extract Hsync and Vsync and feed it separately to the
>> unit, okay. There is an old circuit here that does just that:
>> https://www.elektormagazine.com/magazine/elektor-198812/47485
>>
>> But I know there are also dedicated chips, like the GS1881:
>>
>> https://www.mouser.com/datasheet/2/761/GS1881_GS4881_GS4981_Datasheet-769183.pdf
>>
>> So basically here is my question: before I dive into this any further,
>> is there any chance of success? What is the optimal choice? Or is it
>> quite unlikely that I will be able to convert the signals? I mean, even
>> if I manage to extract Hsync and Vsync, is it likely to work?
>>
>> I am sorry for the naive question, but I am no expert on video signals,
>> and it would be nice if anybody more experienced could chime in with a
>> few words of caution/experience.
>>
>> Best wishes
>> Jens
>>
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