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#226
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I'm hoping I can get mine to work as well as this. It gives me something to look forward to. Congratulations on having it working that well!
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Erich Loepke |
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#227
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What these "were capable of" is the right description. Plus, the current result will be much more reliable than in 1954, firstly due to the greatly improved stability of modern sources, and secondly due to the painstaking recent restoration/adjustment of the receiver.
It really has been a joy to follow this process. |
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#228
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That 1958 Eisenhower video tape looks really good even today, and probably did so at the time it was broadcast. Also, the tint controls on these old sets we play around with here seem to stay put once set, which leads me to believe the "never twice the same color" problem was more on the transmitter side than in the receiver. I can only try to think of what these sets looked like back when they were new with the broadcasts of the time.
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Erich Loepke |
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#229
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Quote:
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#230
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Quote:
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| Audiokarma |
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#231
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I know you will. Anyone that can wind a transformer from scratch is amazing in my book.
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#232
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Quote:
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#233
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Quote:
By the mid 60s, the machines were so good at playing each other's tapes, even in color, that they could be used for the ten-second delay at the World's Fair RCA exhibit just by running 150 inches of tape from the recording deck to the playback deck. |
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#234
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Quote:
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#235
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When color TV market penetration was still ramping up, people who knew I worked on it would ask me "Do you think they'll ever perfect color TV?" I'd reply "I hope not- that's my job!"
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| Audiokarma |
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#236
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There is some truth to that. Being there in the day, folks did not know what good color looked like. They tended to over saturate the color control. In department stores, customers would adjust the controls on the floor models and you would see green faces on one set, over saturated color on another, ETC., hence NTSC.
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#237
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Quote:
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#238
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Early on, was common to have differences between networks, individual network shows, network vs. local, program vs. commercials, and so on.
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#239
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Quote:
This meant that visual adaptation to the white point depended on room lighting, viewing distance, etc. It's no wonder that people couldn't decide on the correct saturation for good skin tones - it probably changed from hour to hour for the same viewer. The white point adjustment specs for the CT-100 and Westinghouse were for daylight white, avoiding the visual adaptation problems of somewhat later sets, but putting a huge strain on the red gun. Last edited by old_tv_nut; 10-01-2019 at 04:11 PM. |
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#240
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What was the final disposition on the tint control? Did you leave it as a flexible cable running through the back cover?
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| Audiokarma |
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