Jaguar Pal/NTSC schalter

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    • ....soweit ich weiß braucht man für den Jaguar keinen Pal/NTSC Schalter, weil es keine Länderprobleme gibt....alles läuft auf jeder.

      ....ausser Dragons Lair in der US-Version (habe ich mal gelesen) läuft nicht auf ´ner PAL Konsole.

      Der Schalter ist vielleicht für 50/60 Hz Umschaltung.

      ......habe aber leider auch keinen Link zu einer Umbau-Anleitung.....
      Wichtigste Erkenntnis vom ZT 2006: "Wir sind alle heteroflexibel und metrosexuell"
    • Ländercodes haben die Jaguar Spiele wirklich nicht, der einzige Umbau der möglich ist wäre halt für das video Signal.

      das könnte dir helfen, einmal die Pinbelegung für das AV Signal und einmal ne grobe beschreibung des Umbaus
      Hab das aber nie ausprobiert da mir der Jaguar zu schade war

      dein Freund und helfer wenn es um Ataris geht -> Atari Age von einfachen Spiele Listen bis zum VCS Schaltplan ist alles da

      Pinouts for Jaguar Video Cable
      (view is looking at the rear of the Jaguar)
      01A 02A 03A 04A 05A 06A 07A 08A 09A 10A 11A 12A
      --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
      --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
      01B 02B 03B 04B 05B 06B 07B 08B 09B 10B 11B 12B

      01A - Left Audio 01B - Right Audio
      02A - Audio Ground 02B - Audio Ground
      04A - Chroma Ground 04B - Red
      05A - Blue 05B - Composite Sync (can also be used
      06A - Horizontal Sync for vertical sync)
      07A - Green 07B - Luma Ground
      08A - Chroma 08B - Luma
      10B - Video Ground
      11A - +10V power supply 11B - Composite Video


      S-Video Cable
      ##\ /---(##- P2 RCA Male (Red)
      ### /
      P1 ###>>--(Shielded cable)-----<-----(##- P3 RCA Male (White)
      ### \ ___
      ##/ \---<## P4 4 pin SVHS 3/. .\4
      Jaguar Mini-DIN 1| . . |2
      Plug Male \_=_/ (front)
      Conn Pin Signal Conn Pin
      +----+--------+--------------+----+-----+
      P2 Center Right Audio P1 01B
      P2 Shell Audio Ground P1 02B
      P3 Center Left Audio P1 01A
      P3 Shell Audio Ground P1 02A
      P4 1 Luma Ground P1 07B
      P4 3 Luma P1 08B
      P4 4 Chroma P1 08A
      P4 2 Chroma Ground P1 04A
      P4 Shell Not Connected P1 N/A


      Composite Video Cable
      ##\ /---(##- P2 RCA Male (Red)
      ### /
      P1 ###>>--(Shielded cable)-----<-----(##- P3 RCA Male (White)
      ### \
      ##/ \---(##- P4 RCA Male (Yellow)
      Jaguar

      Conn Pin Signal Conn Pin
      +----+--------+--------------+----+-----+
      P2 Center Right Audio P1 01B
      P2 Shell Audio Ground P1 02B
      P3 Center Left Audio P1 01A
      P3 Shell Audio Ground P1 02A
      P4 Center Comp Video P1 11B
      P4 Shell Video Ground P1 10B


      For Jaguar owners who wish to use SCART, a Jaguar-to-SCART RGB cable can
      be made as follows:

      SCART socket:
      20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2
      +--------------------------------------------+
      \ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- |
      \ |
      | -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- |
      +------------------------------------------+
      19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1

      RGB connection using an 8-pin shielded cable:

      SCART Signal Jaguar A/V port
      +-----+---------------+---------------+
      6 Left Audio 1A
      2 Right Audio 1B
      4 Audio Ground 2A
      15 Red 4B
      7 Blue 5A
      11 Green 7A
      16 H-Sync (Blank) 6A
      20 Composite Sync 5B
      17 Video Ground 10B (connected by cable shield)


      Markus Hall submits the following SCART variation, for Jaguar units
      that do not work with the Jaguar-to-SCART cable given above:

      SCART plug (solder side):
      20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2
      +--------------------------------------------+
      \ -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- |
      \ |
      | -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- |
      +------------------------------------------+
      19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1

      RGB connection using an 8-core shielded cable:

      SCART Signal Jaguar A/V port
      +-----+---------------+---------------+
      6 Left Audio 1A
      4 Audio Ground 2A --+
      2 Right Audio 1B |
      - Audio Ground 2B --+
      15 Red 4B
      7 Blue 5A
      16 Vertical Sync 5B
      11 Green 7A
      17 Video Ground 10B (connected by cable shield)
      20 Comp Video (H-Sync)11B

      To use an American (NTSC) Jaguar in Europe, you will need a new power
      adapter and a SCART lead to supply the Jaguar's RGB signals to the TV.
      Some European TV sets might have also required changing the Jaguar display
      from a 60Hz frame rate to 50Hz.

      The 50Hz/60Hz frame rate is set by soldering pads on the bottom of the
      Jaguar PCB. On an NTSC Jaguar, they're located on the bottom of the PCB
      near the controller ports. The set labelled "R140" determines between
      50Hz and 60Hz.

      Finding R140 depends on which motherboard is in your Jaguar. As "Stone"
      (the_stony_1@hotmail.com) writes, "The location of R140 and whether it
      is labelled or not depends on the revision of the Jaguar chipset. I
      have two Jaguars, both PAL, one K-series and one M-series. The K series
      has no silk-screen printing on the underside of the circuit board (and
      thus the links are not labelled). The M-series has them labelled so
      it's easy to figure out which resistor to remove.

      "My BJL FAQ contains a section on building a 50/60Hz switch; the URL is
      addie.voicegateway.com/bjl.asp -- please note that this mod is
      dependent on your TV being able to accept the signal; you may find it
      'letterboxes' it so you can see the whole screen, which isn't what you
      want. :)"

      If you have a K-series motherboard (which does not label the links), Russ
      Juckes (juckes@russandem.co.uk) gives instructions for finding them:

      "Hold the Jaguar PCB with the Joystick ports to the bottom. On the
      underside of the board, near the joystick ports, and to the left of centre
      there are four links, the top and the bottom one bridged. (Both with zero
      ohm resistors). Above them there is another link, with a brown resistor.

      "The bottom link is the one that needs to be broken. I used a penknife to
      scratch away the solder, and then a needle-nosed pair of pliers to break
      the resistor.

      "The links are *not* labelled in any way. As another guide to make sure
      you are about to snip the correct link, they are placed directly
      underneath a chip (which is obviously on the top of the PCB!) so if you
      use a soldering iron, be careful!"

      Once you have located R140, connect the two points for 50Hz, or leave them
      disconnected for 60Hz, as follows:

      60Hz 50Hz
      o-o R135 o-o
      o o R136 o o (Information courtesy of Martin Zimmer,
      o o R137 o o marz@haari.mayn.sub.de)
      o o R140 o-o

      PAL Jaguars sold in Europe have the R140 pads connected with a zero ohm
      SMD resistor, which can be removed with a soldering iron. It is possible
      to wire a switch to the points, allowing the Jaguar to be toggled between
      50Hz/60Hz. This is mainly useful for PAL Jaguars to play games at the
      original speed and screen resolution of the NTSC version.

      Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von Black Sun ()

    • Tja,dann bleibt Dir nichts anderes übrig den Schalter rauszulegen,und irgend wie stabilisieren(Mit Klebeband....etc.!).....ansonsten sieht ein Kippschalter nicht schlimm an meinem Jaguar aus!

      Habe ihn vorne ganz links angebracht........sieht sogar irgendwie stylish aus! ;)

      Habe einen Schalter mit rotem Kopf genommen....passt irgendwie zum Farbdesign! :cool:

      Übrigens....alle Jaguar Games sind mit allen Geräten(Ob Pal oder NTSC!)

      kompatibel!!

      Es gibt ein paar Games die Fehlerhaft sind z.B. Dragon's Lair.....

      Dieser Beitrag wurde bereits 1 mal editiert, zuletzt von DubistIchbinDu ()