Re: old Radius TwoPage monitor

>>I guess I'll have to go out and buy a monochrome monitor and a ISR video
>>attenuator.
>>
>
>I have stumbled on a Radius monochrome monitor that might suit my purposes.
>However, these monitors were usually driven by their own Radius graphics
>card, and the card in this case is missing.
>
>Will this be a problem??
>
>If i understand the ISR video attenuator then all i am doing is combining the
>standard RGB outputs (ie, no need for a special Radius graphics card).
>
>Since the TwoPage Radius monochrome monitor is fixed at 75hz vertical
>refresh, then provided my G3 is running at 75Hz, i should be able to drive
>the Radius monitor with no problems even without its special graphics card?
>
>Is this is correct?

hi david

i don't know. my guess is that you'll run into trouble.

to connect a graphics/video signal to a monitor you need to connect 3
kinds of synch plus the luminance signal itself. I don't know if your
synch signals will match what the radius wants. I don't know whether the
radius monitor uses a standard connector or an odd one that might be hard
to find. (i vaguely recall once owning the radius TwoPage card and
monitor, and my vague recollection is that we could only drive the
monitor with the radius card.)

a second issue is that some cards include synch signals in the video
signal. this is usually called "synch on green". in that case, unless
synch is included on all three RGB components, the average created by ISR
Video attenuator will have a weaker synch component. (the presence of
synch in your video doesn't matter, per se. the issue is whether your
monitor insists on getting synch from video, or will accept it on
separate lines, which bypass the ISR Video Attenuator.)

sorry not to be more optimistic

Your approach would be fine with a standard monochrome monitor, e.g. one
of the old Apple monochome monitors.

best

denis