Xref: utzoo comp.sys.mac:36385 comp.graphics:6859 Path: utzoo!attcan!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!mit-eddie!mit-amt!adam From: adam@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU (Adam Glass) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac,comp.graphics Subject: Help Me! Mac II -> NTSC (repost) Keywords: video,rgb,II Message-ID: <475@mit-amt.MEDIA.MIT.EDU> Date: 14 Aug 89 13:25:12 GMT Organization: MIT Media Lab, Cambridge, MA Lines: 52 I recently saw an article in MacWeek with a story which interested me. Well, actually it's somewhat more than interest. I need to be able to do this! Anyway, I read through the article, and I'll transcribe the side bar which supposedly tells how to do it. I'm by no means an EE, but I know enough about electronics to firmly believe that what follows makes no sense at all. ========== >From MacWeek, August 8th, 1989, page 20: (For those of you who don't get MacWeek, but were at the Expo, this was the copy which was given out free.) Reproduced without permission. Sidebar entitled, "You'll need a custom cable" Text follows: To get National Television System Committee-standard [editor's note: is *that* what NTSC stands for? I always thought it was for Never Twice the Same Color!] video from Apple's eight-bit color card for the Mac II, users need a special cable to connect the board to video output devices like VCRs and television monitors. The cable requires a 15 pin male DB-15 pin connector, a male RCA plug and a coaxial cable - standard parts available in electronics supply stores for about $30. Many computer dealers, electronics stores and cable companies also make custom cables. The DB-15 end of the cable plugs into the female DB-15 connector on the Macintosh video card, and the other end plugs into a video output device, such as a VCR. ========== OK... I'm a little fuzzy on that last paragraph. I don't think I'll have any trouble soldering a co-ax to an RCA plug. But how does one connect a co-ax cable to a connector with 15 pins? Which two pins should I solder the wires to? Finally, there's a piece of software associated with this little hack. To quote MacWeek again, [it is] "a free software utility developed at Apple... [which was] first distributed at the Apple Developers's Conference in May and soon to be available on bulletin boards like CompuServe and Usenet..." Maybe someone with Phil & Dave's would like to make it available for ftp-ing (or was it not on the CD?). Anyway, I need to make some videos with my mac and I don't want to have to buy an expensive genlock board. This seems like a quick (& VERY dirty) hack which would save me $1000 and do a sufficiently good job to suit my needs. Thanks... Adam -- "Offer me anything I ask for..." | email: adam@media-lab.media.mit.edu | "Anything you want." +---------------------------+---------+ "I want my father back, you son of a bitch." - The Princess Bride | Sigh... |