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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

I'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage. The unit is a type of VGA monitor which was
manufactured by Kristel Corp. It has problems and I would like to see
if I can substitute a standard VGA monitor in its place. It uses a
special connector which according to the schematic has the following
connections:
1- Red in
2- Red ground
3- Green in
4- Green ground
5- Blue in
6- Blue ground
7- Common ground, (common with video grounds)
8- H-sync in
9- V-sync in
10- NC
There is a 75 ohm resistor from each color input to ground. All
grounds are common.
I found a pinout for a 15 pin VGA connector. It is marked:
Standard VGA
monitor pinout
---------------------
1 Red Video
2 Green Video
3 Blue Video
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2
5 Ground
6 Red Ground
7 Green Ground
8 Blue Ground
9 [KEY]
10 Sync Ground
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0
13 Horizontal Sync
14 Vertical Sync
15 N/C (Reserved)

I would like to try to use a standard VCA monitor for this
application. Can I use the substitute monitor by connecting its RGB
inputs to the alignment machine electronics RGB connections, then tie
all the grounds together, and then connect the h and V sync to their
appropriate pins? Do I need to worry about the other connections? The
OEM monitor doesn't seem to use any of them The following is what I
have in mind:

Standard VGA Oem cable from
from alignment machine
monitor pinout
--------------------- ----------------------------
1 Red Video 1- Red out
2 Green Video 3- Green out
3 Blue Video 5- Blue out
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2 - N/C
5 Ground 7- Common ground
6 Red Ground 2- Red ground
7 Green Ground 4- Green ground
8 Blue Ground 6- Blue ground
9 [KEY] - N/C
10 Sync Ground - conn. all gnds together
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1 - N/C
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0 - N/C
13 Horizontal Sync 8- Hor. sync
14 Vertical Sync 9- Vert sync
15 N/C (Reserved) - N/C

I'm not sure about the Hor sweep rate but I think that its compatible.
Would an old type multisync monitor. (of the type that I scrapped
years ago) have been a better choice for this conversion? I also have
an old RGB monitor with separate BNC connectors on the back for RGB
and V and H sync. Might that also work? If anyone has some further
information on this I would be very grateful. Lenny
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

On Mon, 6 Apr 2009 20:40:25 -0700 (PDT),
" put
finger to keyboard and composed:

I'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage. The unit is a type of VGA monitor which was
manufactured by Kristel Corp. It has problems and I would like to see
if I can substitute a standard VGA monitor in its place.


There is a 75 ohm resistor from each color input to ground. All
grounds are common.


.... inside the monitor and video card but not in the cable.

I would like to try to use a standard VCA monitor for this
application. Can I use the substitute monitor by connecting its RGB
inputs to the alignment machine electronics RGB connections, then tie
all the grounds together, and then connect the h and V sync to their
appropriate pins? Do I need to worry about the other connections? The
OEM monitor doesn't seem to use any of them


Keep the sync ground and RGB grounds separate. Also run separate video
grounds for each RGB signal. Use mini-coax for the RGB connections.

I'm not sure about the Hor sweep rate but I think that its compatible.


You can measure the horizontal frequency of the wheel alignment
machine at the VGA connector.

Would an old type multisync monitor. (of the type that I scrapped
years ago) have been a better choice for this conversion?


You may find its specs he
http://www.monitorworld.com/monitors_home.html

I also have
an old RGB monitor with separate BNC connectors on the back for RGB
and V and H sync. Might that also work? If anyone has some further
information on this I would be very grateful. Lenny


This monitor could be one of those fixed frequency types. I'd power it
up and aim a CRO probe at the CRT. The radiated flyback pulse will
tell you the free running frequency of the horizontal oscillator. One
problem with fixed frequency monitors is that they usually expect
negative sync whereas a VGA card can produce sync pulses of either
polarity depending on the video mode.

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

In message
,
" writes
I'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage.

What is the make and model of the wheel alignment machine?
--
Clint Sharp
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

On Apr 7, 1:20*pm, Clint Sharp wrote:
In message
,
" writesI'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage.


What is the make and model of the wheel alignment machine?
--
Clint Sharp


Its a Hunter D111


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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

wrote:

I'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage. The unit is a type of VGA monitor which was
manufactured by Kristel Corp. It has problems and I would like to see
if I can substitute a standard VGA monitor in its place. It uses a
special connector which according to the schematic has the following
connections:
1- Red in
2- Red ground
3- Green in
4- Green ground
5- Blue in
6- Blue ground
7- Common ground, (common with video grounds)
8- H-sync in
9- V-sync in
10- NC
There is a 75 ohm resistor from each color input to ground. All
grounds are common.
I found a pinout for a 15 pin VGA connector. It is marked:
Standard VGA
monitor pinout
---------------------
1 Red Video
2 Green Video
3 Blue Video
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2
5 Ground
6 Red Ground
7 Green Ground
8 Blue Ground
9 [KEY]
10 Sync Ground
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0
13 Horizontal Sync
14 Vertical Sync
15 N/C (Reserved)

I would like to try to use a standard VCA monitor for this
application. Can I use the substitute monitor by connecting its RGB
inputs to the alignment machine electronics RGB connections, then tie
all the grounds together, and then connect the h and V sync to their
appropriate pins? Do I need to worry about the other connections? The
OEM monitor doesn't seem to use any of them The following is what I
have in mind:

Standard VGA Oem cable from
from alignment machine
monitor pinout
--------------------- ----------------------------
1 Red Video 1- Red out
2 Green Video 3- Green out
3 Blue Video 5- Blue out
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2 - N/C
5 Ground 7- Common ground
6 Red Ground 2- Red ground
7 Green Ground 4- Green ground
8 Blue Ground 6- Blue ground
9 [KEY] - N/C
10 Sync Ground - conn. all gnds together
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1 - N/C
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0 - N/C
13 Horizontal Sync 8- Hor. sync
14 Vertical Sync 9- Vert sync
15 N/C (Reserved) - N/C

I'm not sure about the Hor sweep rate but I think that its compatible.
Would an old type multisync monitor. (of the type that I scrapped
years ago) have been a better choice for this conversion? I also have
an old RGB monitor with separate BNC connectors on the back for RGB
and V and H sync. Might that also work? If anyone has some further
information on this I would be very grateful. Lenny


I would check that pinout against the one for an EGA monitor !

--
Best Regards:
Baron.
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

On Mon, 6 Apr 2009 20:40:25 -0700 (PDT),
" wrote:

I'm working on a display monitor which is used in a wheel alignment
machine in a garage. The unit is a type of VGA monitor which was
manufactured by Kristel Corp. It has problems and I would like to see
if I can substitute a standard VGA monitor in its place. It uses a
special connector which according to the schematic has the following
connections:
1- Red in
2- Red ground
3- Green in
4- Green ground
5- Blue in
6- Blue ground
7- Common ground, (common with video grounds)
8- H-sync in
9- V-sync in
10- NC
There is a 75 ohm resistor from each color input to ground. All
grounds are common.
I found a pinout for a 15 pin VGA connector. It is marked:
Standard VGA
monitor pinout
---------------------
1 Red Video
2 Green Video
3 Blue Video
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2
5 Ground
6 Red Ground
7 Green Ground
8 Blue Ground
9 [KEY]
10 Sync Ground
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0
13 Horizontal Sync
14 Vertical Sync
15 N/C (Reserved)

I would like to try to use a standard VCA monitor for this
application. Can I use the substitute monitor by connecting its RGB
inputs to the alignment machine electronics RGB connections, then tie
all the grounds together, and then connect the h and V sync to their
appropriate pins? Do I need to worry about the other connections? The
OEM monitor doesn't seem to use any of them The following is what I
have in mind:

Standard VGA Oem cable from
from alignment machine
monitor pinout
--------------------- ----------------------------
1 Red Video 1- Red out
2 Green Video 3- Green out
3 Blue Video 5- Blue out
4 Monitor ID - Bit 2 - N/C
5 Ground 7- Common ground
6 Red Ground 2- Red ground
7 Green Ground 4- Green ground
8 Blue Ground 6- Blue ground
9 [KEY] - N/C
10 Sync Ground - conn. all gnds together
11 Monitor ID - Bit 1 - N/C
12 Monitor ID - Bit 0 - N/C
13 Horizontal Sync 8- Hor. sync
14 Vertical Sync 9- Vert sync
15 N/C (Reserved) - N/C

I'm not sure about the Hor sweep rate but I think that its compatible.
Would an old type multisync monitor. (of the type that I scrapped
years ago) have been a better choice for this conversion? I also have
an old RGB monitor with separate BNC connectors on the back for RGB
and V and H sync. Might that also work? If anyone has some further
information on this I would be very grateful. Lenny



It should work fine as long as the horizontal frequency is at least
31.5 kHz. All modern VGA monitors, including LCDs, are "multisync",
and will work with any scanning rate, and sync polarity. Fixed
frequency VGA monitors haven't been common for about 15 years.

I would build an adapter cable rather than modifying a specific
monitor. That way it will be easy to replace the monitor again in the
future.
Andy Cuffe


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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

In article ,
Andy Cuffe wrote:
All modern VGA monitors, including LCDs, are "multisync",
and will work with any scanning rate, and sync polarity.


That's not my experience. Check the spec. I have an old computer which
uses UK TV res for some things and all the VGA I've tried give 'out of
range' on this. However, the original multisync works happily with it.

--
*Hard work has a future payoff. Laziness pays off NOW.

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

In message , Baron
writes
I would check that pinout against the one for an EGA monitor !

Or even CGA. Might be worth finding a TV with an RGB input and seeing if
it syncs.
--
Clint Sharp
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

On Apr 8, 1:05*pm, Clint Sharp wrote:
In message , Baron
writesI would check that pinout against the one for an EGA monitor !

Or even CGA. Might be worth finding a TV with an RGB input and seeing if
it syncs.
--
Clint Sharp


I do have an old Sony commercial RGB monitor down in the basement.
Looks like Columbus may have brought this one over with him. It has 5
BNC inputs, for RGB and V and H sync. I don't know if its multisync or
not. Seriously though it must be at least 15 to 20 years old. I
considered trying it. Lenny
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

In article ,
Baron wrote:
I do have an old Sony commercial RGB monitor down in the basement.
Looks like Columbus may have brought this one over with him. It has 5
BNC inputs, for RGB and V and H sync. I don't know if its multisync or
not. Seriously though it must be at least 15 to 20 years old. I
considered trying it. Lenny


I don't know whether they are still available, but you could get a cable
with 5 colour coded BNC on one end and a 9 pin cga/vga plug on the
other. These monitors are usually fixed frequency, sync on green
devices.


In the UK at least many CRT computer monitors had both VGA and BNC inputs
- selectable. My last Panasonic 17" - replaced by this LCD - did.

--
*Suicidal twin kills sister by mistake.

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

On Wed, 08 Apr 2009 08:33:24 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:

In article ,
Andy Cuffe wrote:
All modern VGA monitors, including LCDs, are "multisync",
and will work with any scanning rate, and sync polarity.


That's not my experience. Check the spec. I have an old computer which
uses UK TV res for some things and all the VGA I've tried give 'out of
range' on this. However, the original multisync works happily with it.


I should have said "any scanning rate within its range". For a normal
PC monitor, that 31.5 kHz and up to its maximum (often 100kHz +).
Very few VGA capable monitors can sync down to TV resolution (some
early CGA/EGA/VGA multisyncs can since CGA uses TV scanning
frequencies). As long as it's at least VGA, it should work with any
modern monitor.
Andy Cuffe




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Default Substitute a standard VGA monitor for an OEM unit

In article ,
Andy Cuffe wrote:
On Wed, 08 Apr 2009 08:33:24 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote:


In article ,
Andy Cuffe wrote:
All modern VGA monitors, including LCDs, are "multisync",
and will work with any scanning rate, and sync polarity.


That's not my experience. Check the spec. I have an old computer which
uses UK TV res for some things and all the VGA I've tried give 'out of
range' on this. However, the original multisync works happily with it.


I should have said "any scanning rate within its range". For a normal
PC monitor, that 31.5 kHz and up to its maximum (often 100kHz +).
Very few VGA capable monitors can sync down to TV resolution (some
early CGA/EGA/VGA multisyncs can since CGA uses TV scanning
frequencies). As long as it's at least VGA, it should work with any
modern monitor.


Yup. FWIW I have a TV with VGA input which seems to cope with a wider
range than most computer monitors, at the lower end of the range.

My original Multisync used to have a relay that clunked when going from TV
frequencies to more usual computer ones.

--
*I'm not being rude. You're just insignificant

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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