RGB does separate the colors, the green wire, however is a chroma mix, not green color. Green is not a primary color either. Scart was only really used for the Canadian and European markets, and the RGB standard. In the US we used “component,” which was a different configuration. Thanks for the video though.
Cool video, I got a Japanese N64, where the seller hacked off the plastic. Kinda unfortunate, as I would have rather they kept it intact so it could *theoretically* be reverted, even though I know I never would. The case is cracked and broken as well, which is fine, as I wanted to re-shell it with transparent purple or green, and buy one of those 3D printed cart slots anyway. I lack the skills or tools, etc. to do an HDMI mod, unfortunately. Maybe someday down the line, I love the idea of modifying, and personalizing my consoles to make them my "own". Even though there's really not much I can actually do.
RGB does separate the colors, the green wire, however is a chroma mix, not green color. Green is not a primary color either. Scart was only really used for the Canadian and European markets, and the RGB standard. In the US we used “component,” which was a different configuration. Thanks for the video though.
I have only opened and repaired an N64 once. Why ... did Nintendo use soooo many screws .. ??
Good video. Thank you
Cool video, I got a Japanese N64, where the seller hacked off the plastic. Kinda unfortunate, as I would have rather they kept it intact so it could *theoretically* be reverted, even though I know I never would. The case is cracked and broken as well, which is fine, as I wanted to re-shell it with transparent purple or green, and buy one of those 3D printed cart slots anyway.
I lack the skills or tools, etc. to do an HDMI mod, unfortunately. Maybe someday down the line, I love the idea of modifying, and personalizing my consoles to make them my "own". Even though there's really not much I can actually do.