Tiido wrote on 2025-02-05, 14:21:
Only pro stuff does a good job switching the VGA signal from my experience. I use an Extron MVX84 VGA matrix for my switching needs (1920 x 1440 and higher resolutions, which it handles perfectly), but only because I paid very little money for one.
Yeah, I'm seeing prices of more pro switches, and they are quite steep.
dionb wrote on 2025-02-05, 14:25:
That looks like a pretty low-end modern solution, so better KVM switches would probably perform better. I have an Aten CS-88A which is pretty decent at 1024x768@85 - in fact it was still good at 1280x1024@85 on a newer Iiyama 17" that could go up to 1600x1200@75 (which did not look good via the KVM, but that is pushing it for any analog connection). A lot depends on your cables too. Bad or excessively long cables will ruin quality. Your link doesn't mention anything about cables supplied with that 'thing', which doesn't bode well.
As for doing the KVM bit digitally and then converting to VGA - that's possible, but there again, most DVI/HDMI to VGA adapters are modern crap designed for purposes where hi-res image quality wasn't top of everyone's mind.
Yeah, it didn't came with cables, so I grabbed some off Amazon. The VGA ones were utter crap, with severe ghosting, smearing and a nice vertical line on the image, returned them immediately. Then I also picked up a pricier DVI-A to VGA cable for my XP machine, that only has DVI outputs. There the image was just a tad softer, but still not as crisp as it is on the Me and 2k machine, and not different from the passive adapter I'm alredy using to connect the Syncmaster to that HD4850 (probably I need to find a better adapter, maybe one with a chip that converts signal from DVI-D to VGA). I've ended up returning also the DVI cable and the switch.
I've been looking on the internet for Aten switches, and those larger one are quite pricier, even if they come with all the cables you need. But then I found this smaller one, with pretty great reviews. But it also looks like a generic switch with just he Aten badge on it, different from the pricier ones around. And it only supports two machines when I have three (at the moment)
I'll think about those more expensive Aten switches, especially when those ones have also support for PS/2 connection, meaning I won't also have to switch mouse and keyboard every time I want to use a different PC. Shame I can't find one with both VGA and DVI inputs, since the VGA is mandatory only for the monitor, and not the PCs: all of them have a DVI-I output (unless one of those GPUs fries itself, forcing me to go back to older ones), only one PC has DVI output exclusively. And if I go for the VGA switch, I'll then need something decent to convert that DVI to a VGA. The converter I have now hooked to the 4850 is a passive one, provided with the whole MOBO Combo itself, and it does make the image a tad softer. Not to unacceptable levels, but the softness is evident when I'm used to the crisp image coming out of my other two machines with a direct VGA connection to the monitor.
I wonder if these Aten switches manage to communicate EDID from the monitor back to the PCs...
About the digital solution... If the conversion from digital to analog is still crappy, they become pretty pointless. I was hoping that sending out a digital signal and converting it just before sending it thorugh the original VGA cable could be a solution. It's weird there isn't something like a RetroTINK for old PC CRT monitors.
Now, I hope that audio switching isn't as problematic as video... Because I was thinking to hook up all the PCs to a nice Hi-Fi sistem, once I get sound cards for all of them.