#1
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Death of the tube TV
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#2
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Well at least they were honest enough to admit that crts Are still the "gold standard" For video reproduction... which brings to mind a question I would like to see answered by one of the people here who work in broadcasting... when will crts Disappear as studio monitors? also... you techs. What is the practical limit for deflection angle? what is the angle on those shallow newer sets? could you have 180 Degrees with modern processor technology? to me a Super slim crt Would be da cat's ass
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From Captain Video, 1/4/2007 "It seems that Italian people are very prone to preserve antique stuff." |
#3
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Last edited by andy; 12-07-2021 at 02:20 PM. |
#4
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The Hitachi projection set I have has a super-keeno adjustment grid for the convergence where you can make the convergence perfect from edge to edge... the convergence is controlled by the electronics and not just statically set at the factory. Of course it also has auto convergence along with this and I assume it accomplishes this with sensors inside the screen, which a crt cannot accomodate. But I could see where this type of technology could be applied to a crt set to with the convergence being electronically 'dialed in' at the factory with a grid like this and not just adjustment rings on the tube itself. Or do they do that already, I don't know.
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#5
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The delta gun crt's and older GE inlines did have electronically controlled convergence (convergence coils)...this is why it is called dynamic convergence as it uses a changing electronic signal. I wonder why modern inline tubes did not use a convergence coil setup which could be controlled by more sophisticated electronics than the old convergence control boards?
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Audiokarma |
#6
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I've recently seen some Philips CRTs with no magnets on the neck, only a coil connected to a small board with some surface mount ICs and a power IC on a heatsink. I've seen these CRTs in Toshiba TVs. I haven't researched how the alignment is done, but I suppose there is a memory somewhere storing data that decides what goes to the coil. This could allow alignment to be precise across the entire screen just like the digital convergence on projection TVs.
Anyone else remember the super-flat inline CRTs RCA used in the late 70s or early 80s? They had a CTC-eighty-something chassis I think. I remember the edge and corner focus being pretty bad. It's sad to see the CRT fading away, especially when you consider how good it looks. It's also sad to see the CRT fading away, when you're a guy who has spent the last 25 years keeping them running. |
#7
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Last edited by andy; 12-07-2021 at 02:20 PM. |
#8
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Last edited by andy; 12-07-2021 at 02:19 PM. |
#9
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Andy said:
Quote:
Now I've got to go find out exactly how does it works. |
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