First answer:
- Horizontal sweep is designed to be phase locked by the incoming
signal - which is **ALL** horizontal frequency based.
Thank you very much. You state it is phase locked. Is only the phase adjusted or the frequency as well? I am thinking about editing the sync pulse generation on the FPGA to get a longer sync pulse. Would that do the trick?
That changed quite a bit along the first B&W models all TUBE
based ... then to NTSC/PAL signals all transistor... then...
this kind of highly integrated digitally processed signals..
The Horizontal sweep always had a free run local oscillator
which would be synch'ed w/the incoming broadcasted
signal .. or run free when no locking carrier...
That oscillator in the old times could be adjusted as well...
Introduction of NTSC/PAL sub carriers also introduced
XTAL oscillators - multiple of the Horizontal sweep.
Several variants exists and the digital ones do a hell
of a mess producing the "local horizontal" signal back.
This model incorporates a VCR in which the HEAD(s) signal
is also XTAL controlled.. it would require a detail view of
how they are being generated...
It seem the FLYBACK is just "drived" by that huge video IC
processor.. hard to say if you can externally adjust the signal..
IMHO? not worthy - simple models would be easier than that.
all circuitry is more or less connected in this model...
Paul