I've had a MiSTer for a few months now, and it's the greatest thing since sliced bread.
The only .. annoyance .. I have is the passion (read: anger) that I see come out online in forums and on twitter around analog output, single/dual SDRAM slots, and the fact that the only 'official' video output is HDMI. The very nature of MiSTer attracts esoteric nitpicks (such as myself) who love both the accuracy of the cores, as well as the opportunity to play said cores on period-accurate hardware (ie. original controllers via SNAC, or CRTs via analog out). But old hardware will eventually become too rare for the casual user. So there seem to be two camps:
- please make the PSX core work with one SDRAM Robert! -VS- Fuck off CRT plebs, don't sacrifice anything, use both sticks
- composite is a truer experience -VS- RGB is superior
- HDMI is the superior output -VS- digital displays can't match the look of a CRT even with filters
On that note, I digress, since I'm here to ask about adjustable (?) composite output/converters.
I am a total noob when it comes to analog video signal technology. My limited understanding is that original consoles would tune the .. color carrier signal (?) frequency to deliberately (or not) correspond with the resolution (or pixel arrangement) of their system, such that the resulting artifacts such as dot crawl would look a certain way or be minimized. Correct me if I'm wrong.
Now, when I use a composite adapter, such as Antonio Villena's, with my MiSter, some cores look pretty great, while others like Genesis look rather bad, much worse than original hardware. I like a little bit of dot crawl, but not this much. I get the feeling it will be a long time, if ever, before we see cores that send the correct frequency to adapters like Antonio's that support the signal. Which brings me to my question:
Does anyone know of some kind of RGB to Composite converter that is adjustable? Something that can, perhaps with a knob, adjust the sub carrier frequency so that I can fine tune the final look myself?