I have had ps2 working fine with namco guns, I used the bypass on the green, I used hd retro vision cables, had it both working on a 40" Trinitron and a 36" jvc , only difference i was using a ge component splitter, the male to male cables were also hd retro vision. I hope it helps, I would try a different game too.
It goes like: Male yellow splitter plugs into tv > Green plugs into that > The yellow cable from the guncon plugs into one end of the female/female cable > USB plugs into the front. You need to have the PS2 display set to YPBPr. You might need to hook it up with composite first, then change those settings, then plug in the component cables. Also - can you get that TV to work with light guns otherwise? Did you confirm that specific light gun and t-cable works on other cables just to rule out a possibility?
I had it working on component but i need put an astrix there because it was working fine but at some point it just started aiming all over the place and calibration couldnt fix it. So i want to say its not really able to run on component unfortunately. I too find that lame.
Your issue has nothing to do with not being capable of running on component. All the peripheral is looking for is a sync signal. Green carries sync on luma and Yellow carries sync-on-composite.(Not the same as composite-sync) The yellow T cable enables passthrough for that reason and does not care if its sync on Luma or sync on composite as long as there is a sync signa with even s-video. This isn't a matter of my opinion or a subject open to debate. What ever issue you are having could be a myriad of things and has nothing to do with component. Component simply means pieces of the video information are being carried over more than 1 wire.
It needs to be over the green cable. Also the PS2 needs to be set to YPbPr in the main display settings.
I knew I was missing something.
I have had ps2 working fine with namco guns, I used the bypass on the green, I used hd retro vision cables, had it both working on a 40" Trinitron and a 36" jvc , only difference i was using a ge component splitter, the male to male cables were also hd retro vision. I hope it helps, I would try a different game too.
I’ll try some more stuff especially ps2 settings.
@@bigbetgaming curious if you tried the other tv?
I didn’t but I got it to work. It was in the ps2 settings. I’ll make another video sometime soon but it was the full screen and component settings.
It goes like:
Male yellow splitter plugs into tv > Green plugs into that > The yellow cable from the guncon plugs into one end of the female/female cable > USB plugs into the front.
You need to have the PS2 display set to YPBPr. You might need to hook it up with composite first, then change those settings, then plug in the component cables.
Also - can you get that TV to work with light guns otherwise? Did you confirm that specific light gun and t-cable works on other cables just to rule out a possibility?
Yeah the TV works fine normally and I have had a TV that was messed up and didn’t work. I’ll have to try the settings.
I had it working on component but i need put an astrix there because it was working fine but at some point it just started aiming all over the place and calibration couldnt fix it. So i want to say its not really able to run on component unfortunately. I too find that lame.
Your issue has nothing to do with not being capable of running on component. All the peripheral is looking for is a sync signal.
Green carries sync on luma and Yellow carries sync-on-composite.(Not the same as composite-sync) The yellow T cable enables passthrough for that reason and does not care if its sync on Luma or sync on composite as long as there is a sync signa with even s-video. This isn't a matter of my opinion or a subject open to debate. What ever issue you are having could be a myriad of things and has nothing to do with component. Component simply means pieces of the video information are being carried over more than 1 wire.
try to find something like an SCPH-1160. It is a video signal Breakout box that you can plug composite cables into the back.