Newsdee wrote: ↑Sun May 19, 2024 5:52 amIs this your monitor by any chance? https://oldcrap.org/2019/05/14/apple-iic-monitor/
Also does your IIc have some kind of dongle to connect to the video-port, allowing to plug a "regular" composite jack to it?Either way, it's clear your monitor does not do artifact color ... so we have to generate the color in the core.
The reason I am using the IIc monitor is because I have a real IIc and a MiSTer, so we can try to get the two outputs to match exactly with the same monitor.
Yes that's a great test to make. I suspect the extra color circuitry is in the dongle used with the IIc.
We have room for a "//c PAL" palette; I've used your values for now until we determine a better one.
Thanks for your help! No, this is my monitor. https://i.imgur.com/vOvLkAg.jpeg Here is a repair video for it. He hooked up a color bar generator and other sources and said it had great color, so I don't think it is inaccurate due to some kind of strange composite input: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1U1uRJXIUj0
I also hooked the MiSTer up to my Toshiba NTSC TV via composite with the exact same result (B&W is B&W, not color). So perhaps something on the MiSTer side is the cause. I am using an Antonio Vilenna IO board with the MiSTer for my testing and perhaps because it has different video DACs, it is causing the discrepancy, or perhaps I am missing a setting somewhere. I don't have a standard analog board on my other MiSTer. I can ask A.V. about this if it makes sense to. I plan to get the new IO board for my other MiSTer when it becomes available, so I could try that when it gets here.
Meanwhile, if you can create a new RBF using my monitor's color based on the photo for the IIc palette, that would be great! I will test that with the Toshiba TV and have the Apple IIc in the same room and I can see how they look side by side in person. My TV's color should be pretty good. I am picky about color calibration.