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See comments below. Ryan L. Kitchen wrote: > I recently acquired a very interesting piece of equipment: A very > large single sync monitor with 3 (RGB) bnc connections on the back. It > is marked as a Digital brand model VRT19-HA, but it is also marked as > a GDM-1961 which I am told indicates the touch of sony? not that it > matters.... GDM does indicate that this is a Sony CRT. > At any rate, I have a five connector bnc to 15 pin vga cable and i'm > ready to roll... or am I. It is not a multi sync monitor, it is very > picky about the vertical and horizontal refresh rates. In good ol' > Solaris and linux et al you can manually choose these things. I'm sure > it would work fine on my sparc with my handy dandy 13w3 adapter...but > i want to use this thing on a pc. I have a geforce 2 256. I also have > a GeForce 4 Ti4200 that is waiting for a power supply and case to > power the M.B. that will hold it. I have heard this monitor requires a > video card that can support a refresh rate of 130 cycles ... I know > the Geforce 2 goes at least to 120... I'm not sure about the GF4. This seems rather high. In my last job, I worked with many SGI monitors, including single and multisync versions. When we would attach a multisync monitor to a box designed for a single sync monitor, the multisync monitor adjusted properly and displayed the image correctly at 75 hz. > Basically, I am hardware oriented, but I've never really taken a > monitor apart or done any significant modifications. I also understand > how a capacitor works and how large the ones are in CRT based devices > (such as monitors and tv's). I would prefer to be alive. With all this > in mind, can anyone enlighten me? I don't really want to buy any other > video cards, as I have 2 very nice ones already... but is there a home > made solution to get this thing running? I just don't seem to have > very many resources. yes I have soldering iron and the necessary know > how... I don't think you need to do anything that drastic. I did a quick google search on GDM-1961 and found the following as the first result returned: Solutions to make ANY MONITOR work on a PC or MAC http://www.si87.com/MonitorSolutions/sony/gdm1961.html It looks like you want a sync converter ($50). I'm sure there are other solutions. > Many thanks, > Ryan K. Bruce Davis Medford, MA
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