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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by worhui@lemmy.world to c/retrogaming@lemmy.world

I picked up some old CRTs from an ewaste find and had real trouble getting them to work around 2022.

I found a guy in southern California that can fix them but he was 2+ hours away and the monitors weighted around 100 pounds.

Just a few weeks ago I finally made the drive and got the first one repaired. It needed a few small parts and a service, but had a new picture tube installed.

It was a Sony BVM-D24E1WU.

The other monitor takes about 10 minutes to warm up. Pat the repair guy told me it would only support sd resolutions (480i) I didn't take it for repair since I didn't know what I would hook up to a SD only monitor. That one was a Sony BVM-20F1U.

Doing some quick searches it seems I got super lucky in the model both displays they were, as well as finding someone who knows how to fix them.

It seems that I should do some retro gaming. My retro system is a PS3 . Is there anything that just wows on these displays?

Does anyone have an HDMI to sdi recommendation? How do I de-embed the audio?

Update:

I realized that my Taiko Drum Master machine is a PS2. I tried hooking it up the the 20" monitor and discovered the BVM does not have a composite input, component only. I'll get a component cable since I can't imagine I'd get an input card for less.

Is there anything to look out for in PS2/PS3 component cables? I had a Sony set I got by mistake and can't seem to find them now that I need them.

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[-] hzl@piefed.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago

The biggest difference you're going to see for fidelity on CRT displays will be improvements for 2d and early 3d games. There are some SNES games with some great art styles that are better suited to CRT. If you like RPGs, I'd check out Shadowrun, Secret of Mana, Final Fantasy VI, Chrono Trigger, and Super Mario RPG. For 3D games, FFVII is one that particularly stands out for me as looking pretty bad on modern monitors but pretty good on CRT. Even something like Goldeneye for N64, which looks comically bad on modern screens, was a lot nicer looking at the time.

Admittedly, especially in the case of Goldeneye, some of this may just be that the games looked comparatively better before later 3D gave it us a better basis for comparison, but CRT is at least a factor. SNES games really shine with CRT, though. The art styles had really come into their own in that final 2D console generation, and a lot of them look much better than what followed on the first 3D consoles.

[-] worhui@lemmy.world 0 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Would the Nintendo switch remakes of the Square game through HDMI also carry the improved look?

[-] hzl@piefed.blahaj.zone 0 points 2 weeks ago

I don't have a switch so I don 't really know. Emulators that simulate CRT blur aren't terrible, but they're not really the same. I think most of the remakes tend to have more modern looking pixel graphics, though, so it's not going to be quite the same as genuine CRT blur.

[-] worhui@lemmy.world 0 points 2 weeks ago

I was thinking of running the switch games though the crt.

[-] FartMaster69@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 weeks ago

If it’s not doing any processing to the image maybe, it’s certainly worth a try.

this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
12 points (92.9% liked)

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