andre104623 wrote:Can you give me some products that would convert the DVI over HDMI signal to component or VGA that would work with my TV's that is on the cheaper side.
I have used
this HDMI-to-VGA converter successfully, although with the caveat that 240p and 480i over VGA is rarely supported. Your Dell monitor will likely accept it because it looks very much like the U2410 on my desk which does accept these resolutions (inofficially and with a few OSD bugs), for your TVs you will likely need to turn on linedoubling to ensure that GCVideo outputs a 480p(-like) signal.
I wouldn't recommend ordering from amazon.de unless you live close by, but a quick search for "hdmi vga" on amazon.com lists a number of similarly-looking converters that might work. Mine is a version that has an analog audio output and can optionally be powered via Micro-USB, but (for now) you won't need audio via HDMI and if you replace the 100 ohm DDC resistor with a wire you can power the converter from the Gamecube.
I must note that my one TV does pickup a signal and says 480P on the screen but has no picture
Very interesting, that means your TV picks up most of the DVI signalling as it should but then fails to process the image data for some reason. I'll have to look into this further, if you're lucky (and patient) I might send a test firmware (or a dozen) in your direction in a few weeks.
EDIT: Oh, and one more question: How long is the HDMI cable that you used to connect to the (non-compatible) TVs?
Do you think changing the full-range or limited-range RGB levels will affect my TV?
Unlikely, it should only change the image contrast a bit - but feel free to experiment with it. Usually you'll get gray instead of black if the Cube sends limited RGB and the TV expects full or very dark grays are all crushed towards black (and very light grays to white) if the Cube sends full-range and the TV expects limited.
Asking for support by PM is anti-social. Ask in an open forum instead, so other people can benefit from the answers!