Comment by 747fulloftapes

Comment by 747fulloftapes 2 days ago

5 replies

A late 90s Trinitron would have been 4:3, so 1280x1024. I found it more important to run a trinitron at the native resolution for the shadow mask. Otherwise things got blurry and gross. A bit like using an LCD at its non-native resolution where things get unevenly stretched and squished.

I seem to remember my Sony G220 had a native resolution of 1024x768 and I could run it up around 100Hz. I think the max was 1600x1200@60Hz.

Often my maximum refresh rate was limited by my graphics card's dot clock rather than the CRT specs.

pansa2 2 days ago

> 4:3, so 1280x1024

That’s 5:4. The correct 4:3 resolution is indeed 1280x960.

  • pavlov 2 days ago

    That’s true, but for some reason, in mid-1990s operating systems, the step up from 1024x768 was usually 1280x1024.

    Maybe there was a popular professional monitor at some point that was 5:4 and had this resolution?

    • kcb a day ago

      Many of the first popular LCD monitors were 17" or 19" 5:4 1280x1024.

      • pavlov a day ago

        But that came after 1280x1024 had already been a popular resolution for a decade.

        What was the original 5:4 CRT that gave us this resolution?

        • TylerE a day ago

          There isn't one. Running a non 4:3 CRT mode simply resulted in a change in aspect ratio. However, by adjusting the geometry in the settings menu get to something closer to the aspect ratio by using the marginal areas of the tube. Pincushion will be a bit worse, but who cares,