Raiden snes versions7/9/2023 ![]() ![]() If I recall correctly, the SNES 1 has a couple of transistors and inductors in the S-Video output in addition to the capacitors so it might be that they are wearing out and that produces the vertical line.Īnyway, the BA6596F (S-RGB A) was the latest ROHM RGB encoder used in the SNES so it should provide the best picture. The SNES 2 S-Video mod that I posted doesn't restore every component but almost every modern CRT seemed to process the signal without issue so I left it at that. It might be that the line is a degenerative issue present in the SNES 1 models I've used my modded SNES 2 for 8 years now and the line hasn't shown up. So you still get the vertical line with the S-RGB A? I really thought that the S-RGB A was the fix to that. Nintendo just removed the handful of components that were used for the S-Video output: It's possible to restore the S-Video on a SNES 2. So, yeah, this ups the number of confirmed board revisions to 6. This is very exciting, I thought that I had seen every SNES revision so far. A lot of work like this has been done for the Genesis side but not the SNES. Hopefully more people can contribute so we can figure out what is truly the "best" SNES board revision and exactly how many exist. There has been a lot of confusion with NTSC SNES RGB cables where an extra cap needs to be installed, this might all boil down to a board revision problem which I've never seen it mentioned. My NTSC SNES RGB cable works great with this system where my SNS-CPU-GPM-01 system would display a very bright/washed out picture. I'm not sure why the SNES 2 systems don't do S-video off hand but it's a major down side of those systems no doubt. ![]() Does S-Video output native unlike SNS-101/model 2 SNES systems. Seems to be the best video encoder for SNES systems according to izarate's findings. ![]() Uses S-RGB A BA6596F encoder, same as SNS-101 or model 2 SNES systems. ![]()
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