#76
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Anyone else got the Sony clock radio that had the built in TV? I forget the model. Bought it when Sun TV was closing for like $30 in 1996ish, used to use it to fall asleep to.
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-Give me Fisher or give me Death- yrly -If it's free, it's for me! - yrly -when you lose track of the receiver count you know you've got too many |
#77
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At work there is an Aiphone video intercom system which uses Sony Watchman "lollipop"-style CRTs. I would guess it's from the late 90s or early 2000s, so the CRTs must have been manufactured until recently.
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#78
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Quote:
Also found this PDF which explains how they are to be connected: http://www.aiphone.com/data/pdf/prod...eo%20Instr.pdf Another manual, looks like it was published in 1997: http://www.aiphone.com/data/pdf/prod...MD%20Instr.pdf Cool Flickr set with this tube: http://www.flickr.com/photos/cmacd12...th/6881694660/ Last edited by rpm1200; 10-05-2012 at 12:22 AM. |
#79
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Wow! I have never seen those before !
Did some checking and found one of the clock radios on the 'Bay: http://www.ebay.com/itm/Vintage-Sony...item416c2394de Wonder why it is so deep? Not affiliated, jr |
#80
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I have too many of these little sets, most of which work regardless of condition (except the Panasonics ). I guess Sony knew their stuff.
Please don't show me more. I have very little resistance to hitting the BIN button... |
Audiokarma |
#81
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Sony also had issues with capacitors over the years. The CRT Watchman TVs generally worked well, but their LCD Watchman sets have major capacitor issues - FDL-310, FDL-320, FDL-370, FDL-380, FDL-3500 all die from bad SMT Can Caps. I have several of these models, and they are all bad - I will not buy anymore of them because of this, way too much trouble to replace these caps.
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#82
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i still wonder how those beams are directed in a flat crt. its just amazing how they did this with the gun straight in and the screen tilted a few degrees and a pic is there.
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#83
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The screens in the CRT Watchman sets are not flat, they are sloped, and the beam is scanned with a standard magnetic deflection yoke - very complicated geometry though.
The real marvel was the original FD-210 CRT Watchman that did have a true flat screen - it used electrostatic deflection, and the geometry was much better than in any of the later models with the sloped screens. |
#84
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I remember buying a Sony FD-2 or somesuch 1986,'87, maybe '88, & they had 'em on a "Hanging" rack in a blister pack...Think I gave $35 or so for it...It was the El Cheapo version, no AC plug or ext antenna connection...Cute toy, it did pretty good in a big town, but not so much out here in the Tuilies...
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Benevolent Despot |
#85
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I remember those. I bought my first CRT Watchman (FD-10, maybe) in 1992 from a garage sale for $5 - it was in pieces - I reassembled it, and it did not work, fried voltage regulator chip - I guess that they used the wrong adapter, and then someone tried to repair it. I did fix it, but was not impressed with the geometry - ended up giving it to someone. I did not buy another 1 of the later generation models, but I did finally buy an FD-210 original model - very happy with it.
Last edited by crtfool; 02-10-2013 at 08:56 PM. |
Audiokarma |
#86
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I have a FD-20 that I use for a portable analog test monitor for video paths. I threw a cross-hatch in it once and if it was a car it would have been pulled over for DUI. Movement on the screen hides a lot of sins.
I also have a FD-210 and I had to go look and never noticed the pure flat screen vs. the tilted screen. Now I have to throw a cross-hatch on it and see what happens. I'll try for comparison pix.
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“Once you eliminate the impossible...whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes. |
#87
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I run an 'ol FD10 in the front room just to turn on and see the inhouse transmitter and it's media player are still running (both run 24/7). The FD10 is the one with no AC adaptor...so it just sits in the front room on the coffeetable.
A crosshatch on an FD10 looks like BEER GOGGLES. Its a wonder that regular motion video actually does look okay on the little thing. A couple 42A sets I have do have "better" geometry, but they are still a bit strange. I did notice the 42A sets have BETTER geometry running on a wall wart than even a fresh set of C batteries.
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My current "holy grail" is trying to get enough parts together to get a Singer TV6U going. Been kicking my ass for nearly a year now :-P |
#88
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I think that the FD-10 was the cheapest model that they made - and it looks like it is too.
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#89
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Quote:
jr |
#90
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FD-20 and FD-210 pix below. The 210 wins and I cannot figure out how they did the sweep. If you look at the edges around the screen there are three little ports. Two above the screen and one to the lower right. Not sure what they do but they have to play a part. Dilithium beams maybe? Now I gotta try the Pana CT-101 color.
__________________
“Once you eliminate the impossible...whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes. |
Audiokarma |
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