PymbleSoftware wrote:
alex_n505x wrote:
Thanks alot for your answer.
I was not sure if a non SOG capable monitor will generate a wrong colored sreen or or a complete non stable or non synchronized sreen?
Do you have some more information about this topic?
Sync on Green on a monitor that doesn't handle it produces a green tinge, mostly white and lighter colours look like light green or yellowish and darker colours, red or yellow look like brown or something.
SOG on a monitor that cannot handle it will result in a loss of sync, e.g. lots of stripes, wild scrolling etc.
However, some SGIs including the Indy and the O2 also supply H, V and/or C-sync signals, and the monitor might sync to those. Because the green signal still contains a sync signal as well, the monitor must be able to ignore this, or it will show a greenish picture. The term 'SOG tolerant' has been coined for this.
_________________
Now this is a deep dark secret, so everybody keep it quiet 
It turns out that when reset, the WD33C93 defaults to a SCSI ID of 0, and it was simpler to leave it that way... -- Dave Olson, in comp.sys.sgiCurrently in commercial service:

(2x)

In the
museum: almost every MIPS/IRIX system.
Wanted: GM1 board for Professional Series GT graphics (030-0076-003, 030-0076-004)