Path: utzoo!utgpu!watmath!att!bellcore!rutgers!cs.utexas.edu!husc6!ncar!stout!cook
From: cook@stout.ucar.edu (Forrest Cook)
Newsgroups: sci.electronics
Subject: Re: sync signal generator
Message-ID: <3917@ncar.ucar.edu>
Date: 8 Aug 89 22:59:25 GMT
References: <89216.120136BHB3@PSUVM> <3881@ncar.ucar.edu> <2590@iscuva.ISCS.COM>
Sender: news@ncar.ucar.edu
Reply-To: cook@stout.UCAR.EDU (Forrest Cook)
Organization: Field Observing Facility, NCAR, Boulder, CO
Lines: 27

In article <2590@iscuva.ISCS.COM> jimc@iscuva.ISCS.COM (Jim Cathey) writes:
>In article <3881@ncar.ucar.edu> cook@stout.UCAR.EDU (Forrest Cook) writes:
>>RS-170 and NTSC are very different color signals, RS-170 uses separate
>>R G and B lines and NTSC puts it all on the same signal.
>RS-170 is monochrome.  Isn't the 3-wire RGB RS-170-like video spec RS-343?
>I can't remember anymore.

Oops, I looked it up in our Seiko CH5301 hardcopier manual and it says that
it is compatible with both RS-170 and RS-343 RGB composite video as well
as R+G+B+Sync composite sync.  Our Ramtek GM-850 monitors say they use
"EIA Std RS-343A (separate composite sync availible)" which is 1280 X 1024
X 256 color resolution in our case.

We just rolled in a couple of Ardent workstations that provide 1280 X 1024
X 16,777,216 color resolution.  The manual only says RGB with sync on green
60Hz noninterlaced, no RS numbers are shown but It appears to be RS-343.
Does anybody spec the actual color resolution of their monitors?  From my
experience, it varies considerably with the age of the CRT.

Perhaps some well informed individual could post a table of common video
formats and their associated scan frequencies, resolutions, interlace
characteristics, etc.

 ^   ^  Forrest Cook - Beware of programmers who carry screwdrivers - LB
/|\ /|\ cook@stout.ucar.edu (The preceeding was all my OPINION)
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