What are your NES gaming display preferences?

-Old CRT you played on as a kid for nostalgic purposes
-Somewhat modern CRT flat screen
-LCD/Plasma either 4:3 or 16:9 stetch

I use a pos 27 inch Sony flat screen for my actual NES and a Panasonic plasma for my PS3 NES emulator.  What are your preferences?

Comments

  • just got a 46" Samsung 1080P LCD and after reading post on NA and other online forums about not hooking up an NES for various reasons, I called Samsung yesterday and spoke to a guy and asked him, he said it was fine to hook the system up, no worries, so I hooked up my system with AV cables and it looks amazing! only tested a few carts, some games will no doubt be mangled by the 16:9 but can easily just switch the pic size to 4:3 for those games, so I'll be tossing my 27" JVC on kijiji tomorrow!
  • Originally posted by: ClaytonBigsby

    just got a 46" Samsung 1080P LCD and after reading post on NA and other online forums about not hooking up an NES for various reasons, I called Samsung yesterday and spoke to a guy and asked him, he said it was fine to hook the system up, no worries, so I hooked up my system with AV cables and it looks amazing! only tested a few carts, some games will no doubt be mangled by the 16:9 but can easily just switch the pic size to 4:3 for those games, so I'll be tossing my 27" JVC on kijiji tomorrow!


    Yah I guess that was the reason I made this post was to find out if people were using modern LCDs/Plasmas.  My NES hooked up to my plasma looks like a smeared nasty discolored mess image
  • I have an old Sharp I use. Very large, and very awesome. I prefer older TVs for this. You can usually get them quite cheap at thrift stores. This is the one I've had since I was about six.
  • I really like my 43' LCD for most games but I have my old "bubble screen" for zapper games and for when my girlfriend kicks me out of the living room to watch The Biggest Loser
  • I performed quite a bit of research before deciding which TV to get for my gaming. Initially, the TV was strictly for PSone gaming, but then I later added a NES.



    I decided on the Sony KV-32FS120. This is one of the most recently produced FD Trintron CRT sets. They were made in 2005. It is a 32" flat CRT with one each of component, composite, and s-video. Also, it has a 3D digital comb filter, which provides the best possible composite image.



    I found one on my local Kijiji, and bought it with the matching stand (another requirement of mine) for $300. That seems like a lot, but this was in 2007. These TVs were still being sold at retail for $600 around here. I thought it was a deal for a TV that has only been in use for about a year.



    I now have it set up with a stereo amp and speakers, which have greatly improved the sound, although NES sound through tower speakers is overkill. I currently have a PSone and NES connected.



    About a month ago, I decided I should get a back-up set just in case this one dies on me. I found someone selling an identical model for a measly $75, so I snagged it. The convergence on the new set is slightly better than the old, so I put the old in my storage room and use the new one.



    Standard def is a must for NES gaming. If you use extended or high definition CRT ("high scan" in Sony terms), there is significant video processing which introduces delay. I haven't personally tested any Sony high scan sets, but I have been informed that the delay is noticeable on these sets.
  • Originally posted by: Zing

    I performed quite a bit of research before deciding which TV to get for my gaming. Initially, the TV was strictly for PSone gaming, but then I later added a NES.



    I decided on the Sony KV-32FS120. This is one of the most recently produced FD Trintron CRT sets. They were made in 2005. It is a 32" flat CRT with one each of component, composite, and s-video. Also, it has a 3D digital comb filter, which provides the best possible composite image.



    I found one on my local Kijiji, and bought it with the matching stand (another requirement of mine) for $300. That seems like a lot, but this was in 2007. These TVs were still being sold at retail for $600 around here. I thought it was a deal for a TV that has only been in use for about a year.



    I now have it set up with a stereo amp and speakers, which have greatly improved the sound, although NES sound through tower speakers is overkill. I currently have a PSone and NES connected.



    About a month ago, I decided I should get a back-up set just in case this one dies on me. I found someone selling an identical model for a measly $75, so I snagged it. The convergence on the new set is slightly better than the old, so I put the old in my storage room and use the new one.



    Standard def is a must for NES gaming. If you use extended or high definition CRT ("high scan" in Sony terms), there is significant video processing which introduces delay. I haven't personally tested any Sony high scan sets, but I have been informed that the delay is noticeable on these sets.


    Yah that is the same TV I have but in 27 inch.  I was think about replacing it with a high end Sony XBR CRT but you have brought up some interesting points.
  • I prefer older TVs. That's what they were made for, and thus work best with. 80s CRT TVs are a bit hard to come by here. Most have thrown them out as they are useless now. Some 80s TVs don't have SCART input, and people generally don't want CRT anymore. SCART is necessary to be able to connect digital decoders, as the TV network is digitalized now.



    What I am currently using is an Sony Trinitron 32" from the late 90s. Flat-screen CRT. I also have an old Commodore monitor from the mid-80s which I use as well. Had a Band & Olufsen TV from the early 80s, but the picture tube died... Still struggling to find a 70s TV that use tubes. That would be awesome to have.
  • Originally posted by: Srimok


    Yah that is the same TV I have but in 27 inch.  I was think about replacing it with a high end Sony XBR CRT but you have brought up some interesting points.

    An XBR won't give you much benefit over a regular WEGA. The XBR would excel for HD gaming on a CRT, with a finer dot pitch, progressive scan, and better power regulators. For non-progressive systems, it would likely do nothing but introduce display lag.

    Anyone in the market for a good NES CRT would be satisfied with anything in the Sony FS or FV line. You could probably get away with the old vertically flat Trinitrons as well, but you have to be careful, since some models only have RF input.


  • Originally posted by: Zing

    Originally posted by: Srimok


    Yah that is the same TV I have but in 27 inch.  I was think about replacing it with a high end Sony XBR CRT but you have brought up some interesting points.

    An XBR won't give you much benefit over a regular WEGA. The XBR would excel for HD gaming on a CRT, with a finer dot pitch, progressive scan, and better power regulators. For non-progressive systems, it would likely do nothing but introduce display lag.

    Anyone in the market for a good NES CRT would be satisfied with anything in the Sony FS or FV line. You could probably get away with the old vertically flat Trinitrons as well, but you have to be careful, since some models only have RF input.



    Thanks for the info. It was getting hard to resist considering I saw a few XBRs in the classifieds for free! but those tvs have to weigh 300+lbs and considering I use it for NES only I resisted but your info made me feel much better about my decision.

  • 25" 1989 RCA TV, currently sitting in the closet in my game room.



    It's a little too big for the space I currently have, but it's the TV I used back in the day to play NES, so I hang onto the TV. It's still my favorite, rounded glass and everything.
  • Mine is a fairly basic 20" LCD flat panel with a 4:3 display. Just a standard TV with a more modern update, really.
  • Well I'd prefer if my light gun worked, but that said in the bigger picture I prefer it over my 46" LED TV or the smaller 26" LCD the top loader is strapped to. One is super sharp, the other (LCD tv) is over coax so is fills the screen yet softens the image so it's like a widescreen crt.
  • If you use the AV out on a toaster NES and mess with your settings, it usually looks pretty decent on an LCD, but I do agree with it just plain being "better" on a CRT. That said, it can be hard to support having a CRT around the house [due to the size] when you're already collecting video games, etc. (I collect guitars and records too, so this gets out of hand, lol.)



    BUT - if you're gonna flip any old systems, you really have to have a CRT handy to test RF switches. LCD TVs seem to really hate RF signals for some reason. I have 3 LCD TVs and couldn't get a Genesis or TurboGrafx to display for shit.. kinda annoying.
  • My only complaint on newer TVs is the delay. Even in the "Game" setting, that supposedly is there to overcome the problem, it's not as fast as CRT.
  • As most know, I am a boob man...there for I love my 27" boob tube!
  • Originally posted by: ClaytonBigsby

    just got a 46" Samsung 1080P LCD and after reading post on NA and other online forums about not hooking up an NES for various reasons, I called Samsung yesterday and spoke to a guy and asked him, he said it was fine to hook the system up, no worries, so I hooked up my system with AV cables and it looks amazing! only tested a few carts, some games will no doubt be mangled by the 16:9 but can easily just switch the pic size to 4:3 for those games, so I'll be tossing my 27" JVC on kijiji tomorrow!

    What will you do for light gun games? The NES light gun will no longer register on your LCD display.
  • Not play them, none of them are THAT spectacular anyway. And why knows, he may have a 46" TFT LCD.





    (That'd be amazing if those existed.)
  • I have a 27 inch Daewoo CRT tv I bought around 2003 from Best buy brand new for around 220 I think.



    I like it because it has 3 different AV inputs, 1 on the front. Also a place to hook up the RF for my toploader, and lastly an AV output, that I can route to my DVD recorder for Twin Galaxies submissions





    I would recommend trying to find a decent CRT tv, the newer the better. I think the older ones have a tendacy to cut off part of the edges of the screens. And also I think the light gun's don't work on the LCDs
  • Sounds like aside from mine being an LED, Clayton here has the same maker/size and output tv that I do and the NES on it runs w/out lag and just beautifully.
  • I had a Samsung DLP projection and the input lag was horrible. Games were unplayable. It had a "game mode", but that just made the games barely playable.
  • Mine doesn't have a game mode per say. The unit if you put on this auto adjustment mode or whatever it's call, it's a fancy term for 120hz. It's odd as the tv on the default popup box always says #x# resolution/60hz but I know the 120 is on as the demo mode shows a 60/120 split screen and my movies and games are clear w/out the blur my older 4yo LCD gets up in the bedroom(though it never lagged on timing picky games anyway as I was lucky.)
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