Quote:
Originally Posted by Electronic M
Think about it logically...Back in the days of monochrome sets being more common than color 'bright spot' suppression on power off was often lacking, and customers often listened to their sets after deflection failure resulting in horizontal line burns (not to mention possible ion burns). All of that was common back then, and not all of that is easy to check for when accepting rebuilds, but it will make the finished product unsellable (especially if they handle enough of the CRT type that clients are not necessarily getting 'their' CRT back). It is relatively cheap to rephosphor monochrome CRTs (compared to color CRTs). So something that would fix those issues would be a money maker. Once color CRTs that are mostly not able to be economically rephosphored became the most common rebuild jobs the monochrome rephosphoring stations likely became a waste of space.
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Makes sense! The only rebuilder operations that I remember seeing were doing mostly color CRTs at the time and had no phosphor deposition facilities. They could however, re-bond the safety shield on color CRTs, (another time consuming, tricky process).
jr