![]() |
Mechanical television
Hello,
When Paul Nipkow, who invented the Nipkow disk in 1884, saw the first time a working Nipkow disk televisor on the Berlin Funkausstellung in 1928, he went away, grim and very disappointed due to the low video quality. Of course, the camera and amplifying technology of these times did not tap the full potential of the Nipkow disk. This here is a demonstration which shows how good mechanical television in reality can be: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osF5gg6RKL4 In the times of HDTV, many people think that a television standard of appr. 30 lines per frame and a video bandwidth which can be distributed in telephone bandwidth, might not able to display recognizable video content. This video demonstration should reject this opinion. As video source was selected a RCA Victor commercial from 1961 for color tv, displaying in black and white on a Nipkow disk based on the standards of 1928 and recorded in 2006. One can see that most of the video content is recognizable - even as it is displayed in 32 line format. Eckhard |
The scanning disc system wasn't all THAT shabby-IIRC, the used a variant of it on the moon for the 1st couple of manned landings.
|
Would it be possible/practical to build a higher-def mechanical TV, say 500 lines or so?
|
Hello,
Quote:
Today, DLP Video projectors even use a color wheel, see: http://www.audioholics.com/techtips/...chnology2.html Quote:
I hope that I sometimes can update my Nipkow disk monitor with color. But the color NBTV standard is still in discussion and PCBs are not available for now. BTW: Steve McVoy is building a color mirror screw monitor: http://www.earlytelevision.org/color_mirror_screw.html It is an awesome project, I check the news webpage of the ETF every day for updates. This might indicate a slowly growing interest in mechanical television. Eckhard |
i want a nipkov TV
|
Pretty fascinating sites, but I like that catchy RCA tune, "Wow!, my color TV..."!
|
indeed, I do too... silly question, but do the hand-built nipkov TVs have a line-in connection, or how would you connect it? lol @ nipkob burn-in :P
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by fujifrontier do the hand-built nipkov TVs have a line-in connection, or how would you connect it? The Video is narrow band so it is in audio spectrum. You could use rca plug as video line-in of receiver to connect to the audio signal from CD or tape or computer sound card. You could also build a line-in for sync control. |
I remember the "Wow !! Color TV !" ads...Seems like they used 'em way after '61...I was 4 in '61, doubt if I'd remember that...But they COULD have used 'em til the end of the Roundie era in '65-'66 or so...Seems like they were used on Disney's Wonderful World of Color, which was little more than an hour long commercial for Color TV...RCA's new Color TV...WOW ! <grin> Remember yr dad wearing a porkpie like Mr. Wow had on ? Mine sure did, as he's bald as a billiard ball...hehehehehehe....
|
Quote:
|
Hello,
I use a simple line-in connection for the Nipkow TV. Recording picture and sound with a cassette tape recorder works well. I can reduce the bandwidth of the video signal down to 8 KHz without notifying any lower picture resolution. Eckhard |
www.nbtv.org sells a series of club CDs with 30 and 32 line video on one channel and accompanying audio on the other.
|
On my last trip to the Radio Historical Society museum (Bowie, MD) they had on display a small, modern mechanical tv. I don't know too much about it but found it fascinating. It ran off of a cheap portable CD player.
|
oh, that's grand. for some reason I was under the assumption that a UK nipkov wouldn't work in the US, I saw the toy one on that website and was like "hmm but doesnt it use PAL" before i realised that it didn't matter :rofl: LMAO
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:37 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
©Copyright 2012 VideoKarma.org, All rights reserved.