Results 1 to 14 of 14

Thread: What is it with the French and their consoles - why are they so lucky?

  1. #1

    What is it with the French and their consoles - why are they so lucky?

    Might seem a strange question, however, some old consoles that the UK could only use with RF output, or if really lucky, composite; were available with SCART output on French consoles with RGB...

    Intellivision - RF only, you can composite mod if you know what you're doing but that's it. French model - composite and RGB.

    Atari 7800 - RF only, composite mod is not easy at all, especially for PAL. French model - RGB (I have one).

    ColecoVision - RF only, composite mod on NTSC is fine but doesn't seem to work on PAL, and if you swap the chips to get native composite you get rainbow effects on the image. French model - RGB (not sure about composite)

    Commodore Amiga CD32 - (i'm working on that system at the moment, and GameCube) - RF, composite and S-video - but the French model does RGB.

    *sigh*

    Why did the French get these systems with RGB when the UK didn't - the UK is a larger market than the French one, so doesn't make sense! :shrug:

  2. #2
    ASSEMbler Extreme
    Lives in the server
    Alchy's Avatar

    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,238
    I've heard that the French government made Peritel (SCART) with RGB a legal requirement on all consumer video devices. Hence, if a company wanted to sell their console in France they had to comply.

    It's not always roses, though - the French NES outputs RGB, but it's just converted from composite.

  3. #3
    That would make sense, console makers would not invest money in R&D if they have a choice. Interesting. Annoying for the rest of us though, a SCART version wasn't even offered as an option in the UK for these consoles, we got crappy RF; the NES had composite though but not many other old systems.

  4. #4
    ASSEMbler Extreme
    Lives in the server
    Alchy's Avatar

    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,238
    Most consoles released in the UK post-NES supported RGB via SCART. There are obvious exceptions (Master System 2, N64, and a few of the CD-based console failures mid-90s) mostly the big platforms offered it.

    I don't know. I think we did ok as far as RGB goes.

  5. #5
    So which retro UK consoles could do RGB, either natively or via simple modding; I am aware of the Sega Master System 2, TurboGrafx, Amstrad GX4000, PlayStation - which others? RGB on some systems looks far better than composite, although the Nintendo consoles work excellently with composite.

  6. #6
    Adult Orientated Mahjong Connoisseur ASSEMbler Extreme
    Never Logs Out
    Jamtex's Avatar

    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    The pest part of Budapest, Hungary.
    Posts
    5,428
    The French were lucky mainly due to the French government deciding to have a completely different TV standard to the rest of the world, PAL improves on NTSC and it is not that difficult to change a composite signal into either PAL or NTSC, SECAM on the other hand requires a little more hardware.

    A lot of the RGB mods were Composite or similar to RGB which was simpler to do then trying to output a SECAM signal, so the RGB offered isn't 100% crystal clear. The french Atari 2600 did output SECAM and offered a total of 8 colours where as PAL offer 96 and NTSC 128...

  7. #7
    ASSEMbler Extreme
    Lives in the server
    Alchy's Avatar

    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,238
    Quote Originally Posted by bacteria View Post
    So which retro UK consoles could do RGB, either natively or via simple modding
    Sega, Sony and Nintendo consoles all offer RGB natively with the exception of the ones previously listed. No Turbografx system was ever released here.

    RGB on some systems looks far better than composite, although the Nintendo consoles work excellently with composite.
    No they don't, they look like shit. NES especially.

  8. #8
    Combat Soldier
    link83's Avatar

    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    United Kingdom
    Posts
    500
    As Jamtex said, it was mainly done to avoid having to use SECAM color encoding:-
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SECAM
    As most video encoder chips used in games consoles dont support SECAM.

    RGB is RGB wherever you are in the world (No NTSC/PAL/SECAM color encoding) and since the French goverment made it mandatory for all French TV's to support SCART "Péritel" connectors in 1980:-
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SCART#Origins
    It made sense for console manufacturers to use RGB SCART when possible to avoid using SECAM.

    In the UK we should be grateful that European TV manufacturers decided not to remove the SCART sockets for TV models sold in countries other than France, as otherwise we would likely not have had SCART connections at all. IIRC SCART sockets started to become common on UK TV's sold around the early/mid 90's, before then it was practically unheard of in the UK.

    There was a huge uproar when Sega supplied RGB SCART cables as standard with the original UK Sega Saturn and made the RF box an optional accessory, because many UK TV's at the time still only supported RF (Some people still didnt even know what an RGB SCART cable was) Eventually Sega received so many complaints that they switched to including RF boxes as standard with mid/later produced UK Sega Saturn's.

    In addition, due to the problems mentioned above Sega supplied RF boxes with all UK Dreamcasts instead of the Composite/RGB SCART cables included elsewhere, despite SCART connections being quite common in the UK by the Dreamcast's launch in 1999 (A case of once bitten twice shy)
    Last edited by link83; 07-31-2010 at 06:56 PM. Reason: Tidy up

  9. #9
    ASSEMbler Hardcore
    l_oliveira's Avatar

    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Brazil
    Posts
    2,294
    Quote Originally Posted by Alchy View Post
    No they don't, they look like shit. NES especially.
    Nintendo consoles look good on composite only if the video system is NTSC. They look awful in PAL. Mostly because the video processors on them are actually designed to exploit characteristics of the NTSC video system (for example it uses intentional flickering to reduce noise on the image) and on PAL displays it simply cause the image to be worse instead.

    After gathering some experience with video hardware (TV) and getting used to RGB-> video encoder chips I found out that all designs are optimized for NTSC and because of that, PAL users have no option besides resorting to RGB.

    An Playstation look awesome when connected to a pure NTSC TV set through S-Video but on a PAL environment you can only obtain similar results (or slightly better) with RGB.

    Honestly on a optimal/ideal NTSC configuration you can hardly tell RGB apart from S-Video. I suppose this is why nobody bothered with pushing RGB in the United States besides the real hardcore A/V geeks. :thumbsup:
    PlayStation Aficionado.
    MSX Maniac.

  10. #10
    Combat Soldier
    Oldgamingfart's Avatar

    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Oldfartsville...or Bedfordshire, UK
    Posts
    500
    Quote Originally Posted by link83 View Post

    IIRC SCART sockets started to became common on UK TV's sold around the early/mid 90's, before then it was practially unheard of in the UK.
    Yes I think it was Philips that had them first in around 1985. I've seen (UK manufactured) Panasonic sets from 1988 with them, and a large proportion of European manufactured sets (B&O/ Philips/ Pye/ Grundig/ ITT Nokia/ Salora/ Luxor etc) also had them (this includes some Hitachi models that were manufactured in Finland).
    Last edited by Oldgamingfart; 07-31-2010 at 01:05 PM.

  11. #11
    Alchy - The TurboGrafx 16 (TG-16) was American, however the TurboGrafx (not TG-16) was released as PAL format and imported into the UK and sold (can't remember off-hand the company) - I used one of these models in my IntoGrafx handheld portable. The TurboGrafx is about double the size of the PC-Engine; however one nice thing the PAL version has the USA one didn't, was a CTX chip that you could tap RGB and composite off directly, and easily - same chip as used in the SMS for the video.

  12. #12
    ASSEMbler Extreme
    Lives in the server
    Alchy's Avatar

    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    6,238
    Quote Originally Posted by bacteria
    The TurboGrafx 16 (TG-16) was American, however the TurboGrafx (not TG-16) was released as PAL format and imported into the UK and sold
    That's interesting. How were they sold, by mail order or in certain shops? They never got a proper launch here, anyway, and I'd certainly never seen one until I got on the internet.

    Quote Originally Posted by link83
    IIRC SCART sockets started to became common on UK TV's sold around the early/mid 90's, before then it was practially unheard of in the UK.
    My parents' TV from the late 80s definitely had a SCART socket, and it was a... Matsui? Maybe? Can't remember now.

    We definitely held onto RF for too long, anyway, I'll grant you that.

  13. #13
    raylyd
    Guest raylyd's Avatar
    French are the best

  14. #14
    Viva la france!

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •