Time for a line doubler, upscaling the 240p to astonishing 480i =)
And if it doesn't exist somebody should make it... Doesn't XRGB does that? or was that VGA only!
Yeah, if steve could do that, then the circuit would produce a signal that worked on every TV, old and new! I believe I asked him, but it's not easy and would introduce even more imperfections/uncertainties. Yeah, you can just double the resolution, 240p to 480i, it doesn't have to be a VGA source signal.
I have another experience to share about this with an improperly conditioned Sync signal in the Luma/Y. I forwarded his video to that point:
https://youtu.be/MJFbiS_bRKI?t=1mOK, see that result in Shadow of the Beast, like electricity or waviness at the top of the screen ? I actually caused an effect pretty similar to that in my SNES when I did a full capacitor replacement job using ceramic capacitors from DigiKey...
What went wrong ? The Luma/Y circuit... It has 200uF capacitance to filter out the DC offset before going to the TV. My ceramic capacitors turned out to be defective, and instead of each being 100uF, they were 60uF. What would happen is when a pure white screen flashed, the screen would buzz out at the top, I'd momentarily lose Sync (and hence picture), and then it would return (just like his Prince of Persia case). On FFII I had the same effect as he does in Shadow of the Beast, constant on certain screens, strange warping at the top of the screen.
Now, I could use a resistor at the output of Luma/Y and that would help somewhat, but it would ruin the perfect contrast/brightness as it would bring it down and yet it didn't eliminate the problem. Once I replaced the defective ceramic caps by going to back to aluminum electrolytic types, I fixed the problem and I could have as white a screen as possible, and it would never happen again. Went back to working as before the cap job.
The point is, my defective ceramic caps ruined the conditioning of the Sync signal in the Luma/Y somehow... That was ultimately the problem. The system worked fine before I changed all the caps, so obviously the caps changed behavior, they didn't exactly work as the old aluminums did.
So, ultimately, I feel the conclusive point is the Sync signal is not conditioned/prepared as properly as it could be, like the way Hudson engineers did for the native, yellow Composite output which shows that it eliminates the problem on that TV of his. I kind of stopped trusting ceramic caps after that experience, but steve told me that since I tested them with a DMM which read they were only giving me 60uF when they should've been around 100uF, they were technically defective, off far too much for the error allowance +-20%, etc.
Anyhow, more tweaking needs to be done to the circuit for the future, is all. In the meantime, his only option is to turn up that pot (increase resistance), or add resistance in his wiring or something. The cost is brightness/contrast going down though.