SNES cable question
Bought a used SNES and it came with AV cables. Randomly, my father in law came to visit and brought a bunch of old gaming stuff he found in his basement moving. He gave me another SNES, but this one has an RF unit instead of AV cables. Which cable did SNES come with originally, or were there multiple releases that came with different cables? Does anyone have an opinion on which leads to better picture, performance, etc?
Comments
It wasn't until the N64 came out that we realized the SNES was even capable of "that new plug", lol.
RF is a pain in the ass, and I always remember it being crappier than the A/V.
My super had RF my N64 had AV and I had to buy the RF for it.
Why did you buy the RF for your 64? Is there a reason you prefer RF to AV?
My super had RF my N64 had AV and I had to buy the RF for it.
Why did you buy the RF for your 64? Is there a reason you prefer RF to AV?
More likely his tv did not have AV input, CRT's last a long time no point upgrading back then unless your tv repair guy could not fix it. I still own my great grandmother's tv that was given to me after she passed away in 1992, it still works great after this long but i tend not to use it much anymore since i have a 32 inch CRT.
Today we live in a throw away society with tv's that would be lucky to last ten years or more without issues and tv repair guys are almost nonexistent.
My super had RF my N64 had AV and I had to buy the RF for it.
Why did you buy the RF for your 64? Is there a reason you prefer RF to AV?
More likely his tv did not have AV input, CRT's last a long time no point upgrading back then unless your tv repair guy could not fix it. I still own my great grandmother's tv that was given to me after she passed away in 1992, it still works great after this long but i tend not to use it much anymore since i have a 32 inch CRT.
Today we live in a throw away society with tv's that would be lucky to last ten years or more without issues and tv repair guys are almost nonexistent.
This ^. My chidhood TV didnt have any AV connections. It wasnt until I was like 18 or 19 that I had a TV with AV connectors on it.
Originally posted by: Mad Martigan
I used RF on my model 1 HDG Sega Genesis until 2013-2014! lol Needless to say, I appreciate standard A/V with audio coming from the headphone jack now. I never played SNES with RF, only Genesis and NES. I'm curious how much the RGB mod improves N64 over s-video. It seems like a lot of money and work to mod to RGB for just a minor upgrade. Everything is better than RF though!
I personally wouldn't pay for an RGB mod on the N64. S-Video looks good enough.
Originally posted by: Silent Hill
Originally posted by: Mad Martigan
I used RF on my model 1 HDG Sega Genesis until 2013-2014! lol Needless to say, I appreciate standard A/V with audio coming from the headphone jack now. I never played SNES with RF, only Genesis and NES. I'm curious how much the RGB mod improves N64 over s-video. It seems like a lot of money and work to mod to RGB for just a minor upgrade. Everything is better than RF though!
I personally wouldn't pay for an RGB mod on the N64. S-Video looks good enough.
I agree! I'm never going to get my N64 carts to look like some of the 3DS remasters. S-video remains true to the original output with just a minor improvement that's enough for me.
In my youth, I knew nothing about the significance of the different types of video output and how they can affect the quality of the image. For someone looking for the penny tour on retro video output from lowest quality to highest:
RF < Composite/RCA < S-Video/Super VHS < Component < RGB
Of course, the reality is a little more complicated but, the best output quality of the SNES for the casual person will be via the Composite/AV cables. S-Video or Component quality is possible without modding the system as long as you get custom cables and a few extra components. If you want full RGB from a model 1 SNES, you'll need custom cables and an RGB monitor.
My current set up is a CRT TV with custom Scart cables to a Component transcoder. The resulting picture is really stunning. I'm noticing graphical details in games (especially in backgrounds and whatnot) that I'd never noticed before, simply because standard RF signal is so dark and fuzzy by comparison. Once you've seen the difference in-person, you can't un-see it and it's hard to go back.