Subject: Re: Two monitors on IIe Path: lobby!newstf02.news.aol.com!portc01.blue.aol.com!news.maxwell.syr.edu!ameritech.net!nntp0.chicago.il.ameritech.net.POSTED!not-for-mail From: "Paul R. Santa-Maria" Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2 References: <395cf367.6838967@192.9.201.2> Message-ID: <01bfe309$201dd4e0$a0e08dce@paulrsm> X-Newsreader: Microsoft Internet News 4.70.1155 Lines: 30 Date: Sat, 01 Jul 2000 03:08:02 GMT NNTP-Posting-Host: 206.141.224.160 X-Trace: nntp0.chicago.il.ameritech.net 962420882 206.141.224.160 (Fri, 30 Jun 2000 22:08:02 CDT) NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 30 Jun 2000 22:08:02 CDT Organization: Ameritech.Net www.ameritech.net Complaints: abuse@ameritech.net Kelly Petriew wrote: > I thought I read something about driving two monitors from the same > IIe. Putting an extra 80-col card in slot 3... my memory is fuzzy (at > best). > > Could someone point me in the direction of this information? If I > read it here, I've lost/deleted it... What is your goal? Do you want to have the same information on both monitors? If so, then you can use a splitter cable (Y cable) to drive both a color and a monochrome monitor, for example, so you can look at whatever monitor is more appropriate at the time. I have done this; there was some signal loss but the results were acceptable to me. Do you want to see different information on the two monitors? Sure, plug a Videx 80-column card (or clone) into any slot EXCEPT slot three. If you plug any card into slot three that uses a slot three ROM (as do most cards except for CPU cards--accelerators, Z80, etc) then it would interfere with the IIe's 80 column firmware. Heck, you could plug in several 80-column cards into slots and hook a different monitor to each. However, no standard software supports this; you would have to write custom software to use this setup. -- Paul R. Santa-Maria Ann Arbor, Michigan USA paulrsm@ameritech.net