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this post was submitted on 08 Apr 2024
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If you can get any kind of multiscan monitor you're usually set for computers of that era. Connectors can be handled by passive adaptors if needed, but it is actually the refresh rate that is not always supported by the common VGA CRT (specifically the 15 kHz horizontal refresh rate).
Multiscan monitors had various names depending on the manufacturer. MultiSync, DiamondTron, SyncMaster, etc... so if you can get any CRT with 15 kHz support, you're set.
You seem to know your stuff, so I have a question - growing up, we had a monochrome CRT monitor with a sepia tint to it, and I've been looking for such a monitor for a long time, with no luck. Most of the mono monitors I've come across online are either greyscale, amber or green. I can't find a sepia tinted one. I know my monitor wasn't unique since I clearly remember some of my friends having similar sepia tinted monitors, so I'm sure mine wasn't a glitchy or something.. but I can't seem to find any evidence such a monitor even existed. Any ideas if this was really a thing, or have I somehow mixed up the colors in my memories?!
I remember a sepia monitor being used with an early IBM PC clone, it was not black and white or amber, and it was not an anti glare protection. I remember that detail because the phosphor tint was very different from the standard black and white TVs of the time.
I can confirm they existed but any other details have long left my memory.
It could have been another colour with an anti-glare screen/film over the top with a tint to it.
Heh I already got a SyncMaster which I've been using as either my third monitor or Retro Computer Monitor of choice, though since its a Flatish Screen and a different format I've been looking for something more CRT yknow