![]() ![]() It is also commonly found within powered networks such as within power stations and factories, etc. Read github link for full info and if you have issues then post (on github issue preferably (or here)) and hope to get fixed one day.240mm 4 Core Armoured Cable is a variant of steel wire armoured cable used for industrial electrical applications as well as being suitable for direct burial to carry mains electricity to various powered devices. You only need to save config once per game after that you can do Run directly. Remember to set PS2HDMI option and save config for each game. If you have DECKARD you can do live offset the screen. Select Save Config to save the selection. "Component/PS2HDMI Fix" and press right on dpad to set it to 1. Insert PS1 disc into console and then load the ELF you downloaded. You do not have to worry about anything, just enable PS2HDMI Fix. Use DKWDRV because it solves all the problems. It will also not work with component/PS2HDMI if your TV does not support 240p. PS1VmodeNeg will work but it can only negate video stuff and is buggy for some games and consoles and detection. GSM will always be problematic because it traps more GS regs that it should. If every time I have to manually run an ELF instead of being able to play PS1 games on auto-boot, I might as well keep using GSM. POPS, what do you mean? PS1 games or a program like POPStarter? If I can use POPS to have fullscreen and so to not have black borders, is it compatible with all PS1 games? And what about not having those black borders on PS2 games? What about SCART-RGB vs component on PS2 games since I mostly play them and not PS1 ones? If not, unfortunately I can't test them on PS1 NTSC discs since I only have a PS1 disc and it's PAL.įor me they look fine once I bypass the black screen problem but I didn't find any difference (as well as when playing PS2 games) between composite and PS2 TO HDMI Converter/component but that must be my eye's/memory's fault. I don't know if using the programs mentioned in this thread make the screen cropped even before playing PS1 games like GSM (that's why I didn't even lose time playing my PS1 PAL disc). It allows a good amont of control over output and geometry (over/underscan, screen centering) settings, through CHEATS.TXT I seems to remember thare are settings appositely made for component users having your same problem.Ĭlick to expand.When choosing NTSC on GSM the screen is cropped. But apparently your TV isn't able to show them without converting the resolution, so we are point and head.įor POPS compatible games, I suggest you to use it. Using Ps1VMN the games will not be distorted. Ps1VModeNeg makes Ps1 games to output at their native region standard regardless of Ps2 region setting. ![]() The Ps2 forces Ps1 games output to match with Ps2 region (so a PAL Ps2 will force also NTSC games to PAL and viceversa). That's the reason you've been suggested to use PS1VModeNeg: Woon Yung's Website - PS1VModeNeg () If Ps1 games are good at their original resolution using it, then you shouldn't have problems also with a SCART-RGB. If you have a composite cable, do a test with it. That said, a SCART-RGB might be your only option. You'll see sharper image and better saturated colors from SCART-RGB, but the picture would be quite "dirty", plus, on component you have access to higher resolutions more easilly). In practice, in your case, it is not (digital tvs tends to better elaborate a component signal than a SCART one. SCART-RGB cable sends a pure uncompressed RGB signal, that's better than component compression in theory. Selecting PAL or NTSC on GSM, converts 240/288p Ps1 games to 480i/576ì, that's the reason they can be displayed through component on your TV. They can decode those signals but usually only from SCART or RCA inputs). Your TV does not support 240/288p, at least from component/HDMI (modern TVs won't display the scanlines. ![]()
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