Got my Mr. Video on Thursday. Immediately pulled my cab off the wall, ripped out the bundle of wires and boards that was my previous direct feed solution, and plugged on the Mr. Video with much greater elegance. Initial tests were unsuccessful with with a Magewell Pro HDMI internal capture card and a crappy $20 USB capture card from the local electronics store (probably 5 years old at this point). On the magewell, the image shakes up/down significantly. On the crappy usb device, there is significant snow and interference in the image.
This is nothing to be faulted toward the Mr. Video. We all (those of interested in such things) should know by now that the Nintendo game board frequency and sync is a bit messy. Great when confined to the analog world, but gets a bit dicey when transitioning that signal to a digital world. It was always hit or miss with my jrok-based direct feed setup, having tested across many different capture devices and other intermediate scalers/mutlipliers (like the OSSC, which simply would not properly handle the signal - via jrok transcoding nor direct RGB).
So, I ordered the GV-USB2 which others have confirmed to work. And, great success:
https://www.twitch.tv/videos/423420784Never mind the mediocre gameplay...I'm rusty. But now I've got a new toy in the mix and new incentive to rededicate some time.
One question which I'm wondering if others have had any luck solving: The GV-USB2 handles the incoming signal as 480i. As such, it then deinterlaces the signal which of course results in undesirable combing (compared to what could be a very clean native progressive signal). Has anyone had any luck forcing the GV-USB2 to treat the Mr. Video output as a true progressive signal?