[Coco] An open letter to the coco community
CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts
coco at maltedmedia.com
Thu May 8 02:13:02 EDT 2014
hi there
im new in here what converter are you guys talking about
roy are you the one who has the rgb to svga converter if so I want one
what is your email
thanks
________________________________
From: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts <coco at maltedmedia.com>
To: CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts <coco at maltedmedia.com>
Sent: Wednesday, May 7, 2014 8:49 PM
Subject: Re: [Coco] An open letter to the coco community
As I said to you before, we can get the cost of the parts down to a
point that you will not have to do any of this.
You still could build the converters for less than $50 each with my
sources. I just did a small run of 50 PC boards of 10 by 5 cm in size
and it only cost $1.80 each. That includes shipping. Most of the other
parts would have the same savings.
Steve
On 5/7/2014 6:36 PM, CoCoList for Color Computer Enthusiasts wrote:
> Friends,
> I am writing this letter to address the problem of the cost
> of producing my converter. Since I have retired I have the time
> to accommodate everyone. Also my full pension kicked in this
> month so I don't need the money.
>
>
> The cost to build the units is approximately $120 USD.
> Isn't that ridiculous? So this is my proposal. I am going
> to ask $200 per unit for my converter to those who can EASILY
> afford it. But if you can't, I will accept any amount you can
> comfortably manage, even if is nothing. What is the reason
> for this policy change? Because the old low frequency
> CRT''s are disappearing fast. I have fixed enough of the older
> TV's in my time to realize they have a fatal design flaw and
> Gene can probably back me up on this. The deflection
> yoke coils are driven by the horizontal and vertical oscillators
> They are heavily stressed by high energy magnetic fields.
> This causes excessive vibration and heat in the
> coils. I have found that this combination carbonizes and
> removes the enamel insulating the wire of the coils causing the coils
> impedance and resistance components to drop which
> overloads the H.O.T. (horizontal output transistor) leading
> to catastrophic failure. If you just replace the H.O.T. it
> immediately fails and usually you cant see the problem because
> the damage occurs on the inside of the coil where it makes
> sharp turns in direction. Since the TV is old good luck
> finding another yoke coil which is a shame because the rest
> of the unit is in pretty good shape for its age.
>
> Soooo.......it is imperative something be done to address
> this problem and I am in a unique position to invest the time
> and up front money to make a modern LCD monitor available
> to every CoCo enthusiast.
>
> Now my converter isn't perfect. It actually does too good
> of a job rendering the signal. There is broadband noise coming
> out of the GIME chip. The green signal is perfect. The red
> signal is slightly off and the pure blue signal is so out of line
> as to make the text difficult to read. The old slow CRT's did
> a lot of natural filtering and of course Radio Shack took full advantage
> of this by ending development when it was just good enough for
> the CM-8. I have addressed the problem somewhat by adding both
> input and output low pass filters to the unit. Its not a perfect
> solution but it does help a lot.
>
> Anyway , I figure with the caliber of people in this group I will probably
> break even or close to it.
>
> I also figure I can turn out 3 units a week working at a leasurely
> pace.
>
> So there it is friends. My life's mission is set before me.
> I probably won't get bored anytime soon. :)))
>
> Roy
>
>
> --
> Coco mailing list
> Coco at maltedmedia.com
> http://five.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/coco
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