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#1
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Just for fun.
http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...dd4812 2054f3 Anyone out there still using their venerable 1946 RCA RPTV? ;-) |
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#2
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"David" wrote in message
... Just for fun. http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...dd4812 2054f3 Anyone out there still using their venerable 1946 RCA RPTV? ;-) Pretty amazing technologies mentioned in that thread. But with that RCA one (the first one linked)... wouldn't there be a spot left in the centre of the screen, where the CRT gets in the way? Or could the lens and mirror get around it, so to speak? LH |
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#3
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"Luke Hooft" wrote in message ... "David" wrote in message ... Just for fun. http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...dd4812 2054f3 Anyone out there still using their venerable 1946 RCA RPTV? ;-) Pretty amazing technologies mentioned in that thread. But with that RCA one (the first one linked)... wouldn't there be a spot left in the centre of the screen, where the CRT gets in the way? Or could the lens and mirror get around it, so to speak? I thought those kind of TV projector things used mirrors which rotated. LH |
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#4
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"Agamemnon" wrote in message
... I thought those kind of TV projector things used mirrors which rotated. The one I'm talking about doesn't seem to (this one: http://www.earlytelevision.org/rca_theater.html) The mirror reflects the image ofn the CRT back through the lens, but the CRT is poking through a hole in the centre of the lens, and I'm not sure if it would create some kind of "blind spot". Some of the other links in that thread talk about projectors with rotating mirrors and films of oil over glass plates and all kinds of stuff. LH |
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#5
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Luke Hooft wrote: "Agamemnon" wrote in message ... The one I'm talking about doesn't seem to (this one: http://www.earlytelevision.org/rca_theater.html) The mirror reflects the image ofn the CRT back through the lens, but the CRT is poking through a hole in the centre of the lens, and I'm not sure if it would create some kind of "blind spot". Take a look at a Celestron telescope. It has a mirror in the center of the objective lens to fold the optical path back along the optical axis. The mirror is so far from the focal plane of the lens (out in space) that it is invisibile when looking through the eyepiece. The same principle applies here. The CRT is so far from the focal plane in the field, at the projection screen, that it does not interfere with the image. |
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#6
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In article ,
Luke Hooft wrote: Some of the other links in that thread talk about projectors with rotating mirrors and films of oil over glass plates and all kinds of stuff. The oil over glass thingies were (are?) eidophors and the results stunning. I remember being most impressed with a cinema sized projection of HDTV at an IBC in Brighton some 20 years ago. But their cost was horrendous. -- *Artificial Intelligence is no match for Natural Stupidity * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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#7
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"Luke Hooft" wrote in message
... "David" wrote in message ... Just for fun. http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...dd4812 2054f3 Anyone out there still using their venerable 1946 RCA RPTV? ;-) Pretty amazing technologies mentioned in that thread. But with that RCA one (the first one linked)... wouldn't there be a spot left in the centre of the screen, where the CRT gets in the way? Or could the lens and mirror get around it, so to speak? LH Yup, See the picture of the old "Test pattern on 15 x 20 foot screen". The black spot in the middle! j/k.... good question though, it does look to be an issue. |
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#8
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David wrote: "Luke Hooft" wrote in message ... "David" wrote in message ... Just for fun. http://groups.google.com/group/alt.t...dd4812 2054f3 Anyone out there still using their venerable 1946 RCA RPTV? ;-) Pretty amazing technologies mentioned in that thread. But with that RCA one (the first one linked)... wouldn't there be a spot left in the centre of the screen, where the CRT gets in the way? Or could the lens and mirror get around it, so to speak? LH Yup, See the picture of the old "Test pattern on 15 x 20 foot screen". The black spot in the middle! j/k.... good question though, it does look to be an issue. Take a look at a Celestron telescope. It has a mirror in the center of the objective lens to fold the optical path back along the optical axis. The mirror is so far from the focal plane of the lens (out in space) that it is invisibile when looking through the eyepiece. The same principle applies here. The CRT is so far from the focal plane in the field, at the projection screen, that it does not interfere with the image. A lens of this type is called "catadioptric". As a side issue, a German lens company made view camera lenses back in the forties that had a threaded socket in them, on the optical axis, to receive a black disk. For female portraiture the disk was screwed in, providing a flattering diffusion, not unlike a fog filter today. |
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#9
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Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Luke Hooft wrote: Some of the other links in that thread talk about projectors with rotating mirrors and films of oil over glass plates and all kinds of stuff. The oil over glass thingies were (are?) eidophors and the results stunning. I remember being most impressed with a cinema sized projection of HDTV at an IBC in Brighton some 20 years ago. But their cost was horrendous. -- *Artificial Intelligence is no match for Natural Stupidity * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. The Eidophor I saw, at the now-defunct Monitor Network, in Boston, was so noisy that they built a soundproof room for it. It projected its image through a window onto a rear projection screen in the studio. |
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#10
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In article .com, " wrote:
Luke Hooft wrote: "Agamemnon" wrote in message ... The one I'm talking about doesn't seem to (this one: http://www.earlytelevision.org/rca_theater.html) The mirror reflects the image ofn the CRT back through the lens, but the CRT is poking through a hole in the centre of the lens, and I'm not sure if it would create some kind of "blind spot". Take a look at a Celestron telescope. It has a mirror in the center of the objective lens to fold the optical path back along the optical axis. The mirror is so far from the focal plane of the lens (out in space) that it is invisibile when looking through the eyepiece. The same principle applies here. The CRT is so far from the focal plane in the field, at the projection screen, that it does not interfere with the image. Very good analogy! |
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