Can't their TVs do 60Hz using composite? I believe they can.
No,not that I am aware of,unless the tv will do NTSC and PAL. Pal is 625-line/50 Hz...
PAL and NTSC are actually just the colour encoding standards. There are such things as PAL-60 and PAL-50 (the more common broadcast standard). My Super Play magazine from 1992 mentions how many TVs being sold can handle SCART as well as 60Hz video, so I'm sure there were TVs that could handle 60Hz in Europe in the 90s. Even if a TV couldn't handle NTSC encoding, it could still display it as a 60hz greyscale video signal.
My answer to all of that is:
PAL and NTSC are actually just the colour encoding standards.
There is more involved then color encoding,the resolution is different as is the screen refresh rate. This is one of the reasons why older game systems displayed in letterbox type format in Pal and ran at 50 frames per second instead of 60 FPS and full screen.
Can't their TVs do 60Hz using composite? I believe they can.
No,not that I am aware of,unless the tv will do NTSC and PAL. Pal is 625-line/50 Hz,and so unless the tv they are using will display 525-line/60 Hz NTSC in full color,it ain't gonna happen. There are tv monitors that will do both,but are expensive last I checked. Otherwise it is not typical and the majority can not do this.
The majority being tvs made and sold from late 80ies untill mid to late 90ies that do not support NTSC 60hz and def not Pal-60 as a feature.
Pal-60 did not begin use in Tvs until the DVD era and Dreamcast era gaming wise and was actually originally intended for DVD use,not games,and its not the typical broadcast standard there still nor is it the standard for game systems,as there are still titles released that do not support it,and even the Wii VC doesn't use Pal-60.( It can do it but no one uses the function
)
I can not confirm myself that Pal-60 does or does not work with composite or S-Video NTSC 60hz signal old ass game systems.
People I talked to in the UK about laserdisc stuff told me it may not work,so I can not comment on this by experience.
NTSC/60Hz capable PAL Tvs were not common until mid 90ies in europe and still not totally mainstream. The UK mag 3DO Magazine used to have ads for the best ones available I had ever seen. There were expensive RGB SCART monitors sold before then that did accept NTSC video input along with Pal,but RGB scart monitors sold like this were not sold or marketed as normal Pal 50hz tvs. RGB isn't the same thing as Pal,and Scart is a play on RGB and does the same thing when the scart cable carries the RGB signals. Scart also carries other signals,audio,composite ect ect...
If possible,can you dig up the ads you have,and scan and post them? That would be cool to look at
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