Monitor Success
/It still works!
For many years there has been a legend in the family about a Commodore monitor hidden somewhere in our loft. We managed to find it this weekend. It’s a 1084p model that was sold for use with the Commodore Amiga, but I kept mine around for the Sony PlayStation and beyond. Eventually it found its way to “the place where electrical things go to die” and we forgot where it was.
Until now. After an intensive search we managed to track it down and carry it carefully downstairs. It seems to have survived its time between the joists quite well. We had a look at the circuit board and all the capacitors looked in good shape so we pushed our luck and powered it up. It worked, which was nice. Along with the monitor we also found this, which I bought in a fit of madness a long time ago and then promptly forgot about:
Imagine if you had spent all year waiting for a Nintendo 64 and then found this under the Cristmas tree…
We were searching for something that could output composite video and this, despite its many other faults, will do that. It works fine too. Some of the 84 games have Mario in the title. One of them works with the light gun. All of them have an eight-bit flavour you might recall from the very earliest days of home computing. And there really are 84. If you really want a console like this to give to someone you don’t like much, search for “Retro Argo Ultra 8 Bit Video Game Console” and you might get lucky. Or not.
Anyhoo, the monitor is headed off for a happy retirement running the occasional retro game where a cathode ray tube (CRT) display gives the proper authentic experience.