Homemade RF Shielding

Discussion in 'Modding and Hacking - Consoles and Electronics' started by PCB_Master, Dec 4, 2010.

  1. PCB_Master

    PCB_Master Rapidly Rising Member

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    Can you make RF shielding? I foolishly threw away my MD1's top shield. I heard tin foil works but I want something a bit more permanent...
     
  2. goombakid

    goombakid Spirited Member

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    Sheet metal, maybe? Isn't that what most RF shields are formed from? Probably could just reform the shield.

    Otherwise, going on the foil idea, perhaps aluminum tape might work, tape up the inside of the upper cover. Just throwing out ideas.
     
  3. raylyd

    raylyd Guest

  4. PCB_Master

    PCB_Master Rapidly Rising Member

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    I actually don't use the RF box. Besides SCART is pretty useless here in the states. I have made my own connector on the back for my composite, the picture is fine but I get a hum from the speakers, even if I use the headphone jack...
     
  5. ASSEMbler

    ASSEMbler Administrator Staff Member

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    Are you getting that much interference?
     
  6. raylyd

    raylyd Guest

    Why is scart useless in the states dont have scart sockets on the tvs or something.?
     
  7. BM-Viper

    BM-Viper <B>Site Supporter 2013</B><BR><B>Site Supporter 20

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    Exactly, american tvs don't support scart, the plugs aren't there. never have been either.
     
  8. PCB_Master

    PCB_Master Rapidly Rising Member

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    In a word, yes.
     
  9. raylyd

    raylyd Guest

    no scart sockets what do they use instead of scarts.
    plus what about s/video mods or a hdmi to scart converter.?
    you would see the best picture better than rca or rf.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Dec 4, 2010
  10. Elijah

    Elijah Intrepid Member

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    S-video is generally considered sufficient, and there is also component on more recent sets. That is on par with RGB SCART.
     
    Last edited: Dec 4, 2010
  11. raylyd

    raylyd Guest

    That sucks though no scart sockets.
     
  12. tails92

    tails92 Spirited Member

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    No, S-Video is lower quality than RGB. I have never been in the US but from what I've read on the internet some TVs have separate RCA jacks for every RGB component, so a cable for red, another for green, and another for blue. For instance, the official video cable for the PSOne outputs component, while the one I use now is unofficial and crappy but outputs RGB via SCART. The difference in video quality is reeeallly big, my current cable even if crappy gets me a much better picture.

    I don't know why they did not put SCART on US televisions, it might be another case of stupid nationalism like for electrical outlet sockets...
     
    Last edited: Dec 5, 2010
  13. Elijah

    Elijah Intrepid Member

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    You misunderstood me. I simply said that S-video was generally considered sufficient (i.e., certainly better than composite), not that it was as good as RGB. I said that component is on par with RGB.

    By the way, the "default" PlayStation cable is not RGB, it is a composite cable. What you seem to describe is component (separate red, green and blue wires), but that was never released for PS1, since it did not support that output; only the PS2 onwards support it. You are probably confusing it with a composite cable, which has one yellow wire for video and a red and white for audio. That was produced for PS1 and would be much worse than RGB (even worse than S-video), so that is what you are most likely referring to.
     
    Last edited: Dec 5, 2010
  14. tails92

    tails92 Spirited Member

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    Last edited: Dec 5, 2010
  15. Elijah

    Elijah Intrepid Member

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    You misread my post again. I said component...
     
  16. tails92

    tails92 Spirited Member

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    Yeah, I misread your posts because I actually thought composite carried R, G, B while it carries YPbPr. :p
     
  17. Alchy

    Alchy Illustrious Member

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    You have composite and component mixed up.

    Component = YPbPr = one Luminance signal and two colour signals, blue and red (this is putting it simply. The remaining colour, green, is derived from the three signals). It is called "component" because each wire carries a different fundamental component of the final image.
    RGB = Red Green Blue, three colour signals.
    Composite = a composited video signal, on a single wire. All the colour and luminance on one signal; obviously inferior.

    It's about the only good thing going for European gamers.
     
  18. MottZilla

    MottZilla Champion of the Forum

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    Few people, but some, in the US buy Professional video monitors or Arcade monitors that take analog RGB at 15khz. I got such a monitor awhile back and bought some passive SCART switch box where you can plug in two SCART cables to the box and a SCART cable goes out of the box. I covered one of the two SCART ports, took the SCART end off and wired it to a PC VGA 15 pin dsub connector as well as RCA audio jacks. So I can plug in a Euro SCART RGB cable for systems like SNES, PS1, Saturn, MegaDrive, and so on into the box. The SCART cable leading out of the box goes to a small project box that has my 15pin VGA style dsub connector and RCA/phono audio connectors. II picked up a VGA to BNC cable somewhere along the line that I just plug into the box and the BNC connections to the BNC analog RGB inputs on my monitor.

    Anyway it works great. It wasn't hard or expensive to do really. So if you still retro game in the US and care about picture quality it isn't that crazy to pickup a good analog CRT with RGB input. But European gamers certainly have it easy since they don't have to make much of an effort at all. But atleast US games can be happy they never had to deal with the PAL50 framerate.
     
    Last edited: Dec 5, 2010
  19. PCB_Master

    PCB_Master Rapidly Rising Member

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    I hate to crash the whole "Component vs. SCART" party but my problem is fixed. There wasn't any interference from the RF box, I was using a power supply with too little amperage. TMEE confirmed that this would indeed cause a hum on the speakers.
     
  20. raylyd

    raylyd Guest

    i was told you can get hdmi to scart would
    i know scarts are not on your tvs you have seen the best picture until you have one mate its just the best
     
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