groepaz wrote:Well it so happens in the C64 the luma/chroma level adjustments are in the modulator.
sure, however you can tweak them however you like without affecting the channel or the sidebands or whatever else would potentially be a problem for your neighbours. in the first place you will get a bad picture when the level is too high.
1. I know for a fact this is completely false. C64 modulators are cheap and when they receive excessive levels of luma, sync or chroma they broadcast junk all over the spectrum.
2. People who start tweaking in their modulators because they want to improve their display usually don't know which adjustment is related to the luma or chroma level and they play with pretty much everything they can tweak including the variable coils - my point remains, C64 modulators were adjusted to near perfection when they came out of the shop and if they had not, the FCC would have been all over Commodore.
3. What exactly does this have to do with VIC-20 S-Video mod and doing it the right way ? - IMHO you just want to argue for the sake of arguing to simply steer the exchange away from the main issue; making a VIC-20 S-Video mod begins with getting your VIC-20 adjusted correctly first and THEN modding. Getting a picture that "looks" right absolutely doesn't mean your signal is ok.
joshuadenmark wrote:Yes please
At your service...
There are 3 attachment points in the image above.
1. The white wire is the easiest connection to the ground I could solder - the nearest point was too tight for the soldering iron to get in and many other places had no thermal relief so that's the best compromise I could find
2. The luma+sync is connected to the output of the video amplifier with LC filter
3. The chroma is attached directly to pin 2 of the 6560 via a 360 Ohms resistor in series with a 1206 SMT capacitor of 0.1 uF.
Be normal.