Thank you very very much for your help! I really appreciate it!
These 150 Ohms were an impedance value a friend of mine vaguely remembered, as well, btw (I asked him today).
So there's something different, indeed.
Maybe the PAL/NTSC models of the 1702 were different a bit, too.
Or maybe some early 1702 models were modified 1701 models, not sure.
Anyway, knowing these potential values for Chroma/Luma may help fixing S-Video cables.
I also agree that the 1702 wasn't exactly the best design.
People on the net really glorify that particular model.
Perhaps because it's cult, of because of the aesthetics or because it has a nice form factor (stackable).
It also had many habdy controls behind the front bezel.
But visually.. I don't know. When I was a child, it simply was my video monitor that I got from my dad.
The picture always was okay via AV, but I don't remember it being stellar.
- I *think* it might have had an analogue comb filter, because Composite never was "bad" no matter the source material or cable type.
But somehow I always was impressed by the modern TV set my friends had.
Because, in the 90s, their TVs had AV sockets and a clean picture.
It seemed more hi-res than my 1702vs picture.
They had those OSDs rather than knobs.
Our old TV at home in the living room had RF only.
We used a video recorder as a tuner and to have AV ports.
A bit later, still in the 90s, my dad also installed his old satellite receiver besides the attic in the mansard.
The parabolic dish was mounted on a chair near the window. It still used an LNC, the predecessor of the LNB.
The AV cable of it was ~10m cable long and routed down through the house to that 1702 in my bed room.
But strangely, picture quality was still okay.
The receivers RF was fed through coaxial cables, I believe. We still had a huge terrestrial antenna on the roof back then.
English: Small corrections. Sorry for my poor English. I did understand what you guys wrote, but sometimes I have trouble expressing things in English language.
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
//My video channel//