D24 is 16:9 with 1000 lines, would probably be insanely sharp for retro, and would do even 7th gen games proud. You NEED the controller for to actually make much use of it. If it doesn't come with it (BKM-10R), that's going to be an extra $40+.
You also need to make sure that it has the proper option cards. Unlike PVMs, BVMs have interchangeable option cards that change what signals they can display. If you end up buying one without any cards or just say SDI cards, that's another sizable chunk of cash you'll need to drop. This would allow for quite a large number of usable inputs though.
20L5 is 4:3 with 800 lines, 600 if displaying a 16:9 image. Very sharp but not as much as the above. Retro would be wonderful, and would be great for 6th gen too; Wouldn't say it would be bad for 7th either.
Controls are on the monitor, so an external remote isn't necessary. Has the ability to use option cards like the above, but has permanent inputs for composite, s-video, and RGB/Component.
Those prices are complete and utter shit.
1910 is quite an old model, pretty sure it's completely analog. 900 TVL. In good condition, it'd have one hell of a nice picture, but your vague description doesn't make it sound that way.
To literally copy and paste something I wrote 2-3 hours ago:
Having been went through by a professional is great, but did they actually calibrate them or just say "Yeah, this looks alright"?
Even with that, $600 is insane for a 20L5. I think a fully equipped D24 with its controller would be alright for that, but that's still pretty steep in my mind.
The D24 comes with controller and has been professionally recapped and calibrated. It's $650 delivered to my door.
This is the one I was leaning towards, just want to be sure it will play NES, SNES and Genesis ok.
I will sell you my perfect condition BVM 20F1 with a NOS BKM 10R control Unit for 650 shipped .... But I won't because I have a conscience.
Seriously man just be patient and buy one off of craigslist. You live in California it can't be that hard. Not trying to be snarky, but if you buy any CRT even a god tier monitor, for 600 bucks you will feel like a chump when a listing pops up for ten of them for 50 a piece. Just trying to save you some heart ache.
Passed on the D24....
Now I have an opportunity to get a PVM-20M2U for $200 or so. Seems to be cosmetically nice.
Is this a good monitor for 8-16 bit systems?
Has anyone here connected their PC to a PVM or BMV type monitor to play MAME? would like to do this but not sure the best way to go about it.
I haven't tried this with a PVM but I've setup several MAME PCs to connect to 15K arcade monitors. There are several ways to do it but I've had the best results using GroovyMAME and CRT_EmuDriver with an ATi HD4xxx graphics card. CRT_EmuDriver is a special set of ATi graphics drivers that allow native support for low, arcade crt resolutions, the newest graphics cards that it works with are the ATi HD4xxx series though. GroovyMAME is a special build of MAME that works in conjunction with CRT_EmuDriver so that the signal getting pushed out through the video card is the native resolution/refresh rates that the games were designed to run at. As a result is also does a great job minimizing lag.
Alternatives are the Soft15Khz driver which also works with older nVidia cards but is more difficult to setup and doesn't work as well (at all?) with Windows Vista or newer (I believe CRT_EmuDriver works up to Win 7). Another alternative is the Ultimarc ArcadeVGA card which supports newer windows versions but it's an expensive card (for what it is) and doesn't support as wide a variety of resolutions as other solutions.
There are drawbacks to these as well. CRT_EmuDriver and Soft15Khz don't work until the PC is booted into windows, before then they'll be outputting a 31K VGA image that your PVM probably can't read, (this can be fixed with CRT_EmuDriver using the Atom15 firmware upgrade).
Setting up any of the above solutions is also a lot of work, and it's not something that you can easily switch to when using your normal PC, it's really designed to be setup on a PC that will run at those resolutions 100% of the time.
of course you'll also need to build some sort of VGA to SCART or VGA to BNC adapter. to actually connect it to your monitor. I don't know enough about the PVMs yet but on an arcade setup you typically also need a video amp as the VGA output signal isn't strong enough for some monitors to pickup.
The good news is that you could also run the MESS emulator or GroovyUME to get similar 15K support from classic console emulators that it supports like NES and Genesis.
It's a shame as I don't like using my hyperspin setup as I have to run it through my LCD, and most emulators look like crap.
Currently using my Wii to emulate a lot of stuff as it outputs low res, but its still limited as there is no decent playstation or saturn emulation or decent MAME.
Seems like the only solution is to build a dedicated PC for emulation and hook it up to my BVM as you say.