A while back, I was faced with a dilemma of connecting different types of video equipment to my Commodore 1080 RGB monitor. It began with wanting to play my Sega Saturn using RGB. As I live in the states, SCART, as nice as it is, has no support here at all. I also had no video cable for my Saturn at all, so I routed the side and fed all the A/V connections to a DB25 plug, and called the port "AUV" (Advanced User Video).
Well, later on, I came across two Atari ST computers, but wanted an RGB source for them. Rather than designing a whole new cable from scratch, I made a cable that connected to the existing AUV cable I put together for using the Saturn with the monitor. I also made a VGA version which grounded the mono detect line and combined the RGB signals, to utilize the ST's High Resolution display mode. Then I made one for connecting my Commodore 64. I've since replaced that monitor with a Sony HR Trinitron broadcast monitor, and I shelved AUV for a while.
Now that I find myself making oodles of video cables all over again, I'm finding that BNC connectors are expensive to build, as well as being a pain to work with. If SCART was used here in the states, it would have made life a LOT simpler. So I'm back to building an AUV box for my monitor (So I don't have to keep buying more BNC connectors and coax cable) and cables for my ST and my A500 to connect to that box.
I'm building a few more cables, and refining my work with my AUV standard, and I was just wondering if this might be useful to anyone else? Chances are, it's not, but if anyone does have an interest in a simplified connector that sort of stands in place of SCART for people that live outside of Europe, I'd be more than happy to share this with anyone else for them to utilize or improve upon.
Basically, it's two cables. One you make for your monitor(s), and one you make for the specific device. Of course, I don't see it having a practical purpose for a lot of people, but if anyone has one particular monitor they'd like to use with a bunch of different computers/consoles/other equipment, then I will be more than happy to share this, even if any monkey could have come up with it.