I finally plucked up the courage to open the Philips SPC900NC and had a good look at the insides before deciding to go ahead with the mod. The instructions I followed here were very good but left me with a few questions. It’s not clear how the connection to the parallel port is made and half way through the instructions there’s a mention of a manual switch which again is not very clear.
I’ll draw up a cicuit diagram when I get a minute to help others who get this far then panic. Luckily I’ve done some work with parallel interfaces before, an intruder detection system and a robot controller, but that was years ago. I found a 25 pin D connector amongst the many bits of junk that I’ve collected over the years, it was actually an old COM2 face plate of an ancient PC, and I dug out some CAT5 cable that I had left over from cabling the house.
Making the LX mod involved soldering 6 wires onto some easy to see pads which turned out to be very easy indeed. The tricky part was trying to get everything back into the original case, but I got there eventually. I’ll get a bigger box soon to rehouse the camera which hopefully will allow me to add some cooling. I’ve not connected the switch wires as unplugging the parallel cable restores the camera back to video mode. If you do the same then you only need to solder the pin and pad 8/13 and +5v and gnd.
Testing the mod was another matter, I was using the free version of K3CCDTools but had some trouble getting the camera to produce any image and started to worry that using the 4016 instead of the 4066 was not a good idea. I ordered the full version of K3CCDTools3 from Peter Katreniak and he sent the unlock codes the following day.

I’ve changed this image from the original after experimenting with the settings


