You know, I thought of something. You don't have to really break Composite support over this and there's a much better way than building another circuit. Back when I was inspecting new LCD TVs to see how many had S-Video (very few nowadays), I noticed a trick they did to save space in supporting both Composite and YPbPr Component signals: Instead of 4 RCA jacks (yellow, green, blue, and red), they reduced it to 3, but the green jack for Luma was colored half green/half yellow to indicate that it accepted a Composite signal and thus would digitally switch to it if detected.
Based on that idea, when I did my SNES Component mod, I drilled the holes for a triple RCA jack mount (green, blue, red) but I also bought a little switch and later added that, so when the switch is on the Luma side, Component works, but when I flip the switch, the same green jack outputs a regular Composite signal. This way, I didn't have to drill a big 4th hole for a yellow RCA jack for Composite.
Anyhow, based on this idea, all you need is a simple switch. You'd find that resistor (or trace) that delivers Luma into the Composite mixer/amplifier, you'd solder off one end, then solder wires from and to, and those wires would go to the manual switch (placement would have to be determined, next to the S-Video jack perhaps), etc. OK, so idea is, when you're using S-Video, the switch is in the off position, disconnecting Luma from the Composite mixer, but say you get a new TV which doesn't have S-Video support, boom, just flip the switch and now default Composite support is restored.
I was asking steve something more complicated and needless (which I see now) in the other thread, which was what's the best way to build another circuit to maintain Composite support. But, that idea is totally replaceable by the switch idea and there's no possibility of contamination... If you don't mind buying the right switch and drilling another hole for it, it'll do the trick just fine!