Author Topic: Help can my gamecube be hooked-up?  (Read 2491 times)

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Offline tekkenlover

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Help can my gamecube be hooked-up?
« on: February 26, 2005, 11:25:11 AM »
Guy's,I've got a AOC 15'LCD Monitor that use to be on my old computer.
Can I hook it up to the gamecube that I'am buying monday?And if so how?


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Cube it up!!

Offline Djunknown

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RE:Help can my gamecube be hooked-up?
« Reply #1 on: February 27, 2005, 04:11:43 PM »
Short answer: It's possible but pricey.

See what I mean.

Also, it will only support games that support Progressive Scan, so its either big pimpin' or not happenin'.

Also, Trusty PGC has a review

Hope this helps.
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Offline Gamefreak

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RE: Help can my gamecube be hooked-up?
« Reply #2 on: February 27, 2005, 07:43:45 PM »
Wow that's sweet. I think I'll get one. I don't have an HDTV and I really want to play in 480p, also with my GCN next to my computer I'll be able to use my 5.1 speakers too (which I don't use because I'm not about to move them back and forth between my PC and TV)... I'd pay 50 bucks for that.

Offline georges_tia

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RE: Help can my gamecube be hooked-up?
« Reply #3 on: March 05, 2005, 08:00:09 PM »
I was going to recommend a component to VGA transcoder, like the one from Key Digital, which is what I use. Then I checked the latest prices, and was surprised to find that they're listed for $159 (!!) now. I bought one a year ago on sale for $60 to use with my Gamecube and Xbox, and it works great. However, if you are just wanting a cheap VGA hookup, that modified cable from Ahead Games looks like a better value. The adapter I use requires component inputs, which means you'd need to shell out $30 more for the GC component cables. The advantage of the transcoder is that it has a VGA passthrough so you can hook up both a console and PC at the same time, and since it takes component inputs you can hook up either a Gamecube or Xbox if you have it (I guess PS2 as well for the very rare progressive scan PS2 games, but I haven't tried that).

If you want to play interlaced games on a VGA monitor, you'll need an upscan converter. There are cheap ones out there, but I've never heard very good things about the quality of their output. I use an XRGB-2 Plus upscan converter from Micomsoft for this, but they're not cheap ($200+). The quality is excellent though. The drawback is that the XRGB-2 only takes an interlaced signal, so for a system like the Gamecube which has a fairly large number of non-progressive games, I have to switch back and forth between the transcoder and upscan converter.