CRT projector explained

A CRT projector is a video projector that uses a small, high-brightness cathode ray tube (CRT) as the image generating element. The image is then focused and enlarged onto a screen using a lens kept in front of the CRT face. The first color CRT projectors came out in the early 1950s. Most modern CRT projectors are color and have three separate CRTs (instead of a single, color CRT), and their own lenses to achieve color images. The red, green and blue portions of the incoming video signal are processed and sent to the respective CRTs whose images are focused by their lenses to achieve the overall picture on the screen. Various designs have made it to production, including the "direct" CRT-lens design, and the Schmidt CRT, which employed a phosphor screen that illuminates a perforated spherical mirror, all within an evacuated cathode ray tube.

The image in the Sinclair Microvision flat CRT is viewed from the same side of the phosphor struck by the electron beam. The other side of the screen can be connected directly to a heat sink, allowing the projector to run at much brighter power levels than the more common CRT arrangement.[1]

Though systems utilizing projected video at one time almost exclusively used CRT projectors, they have largely been replaced by other technologies such as LCD projection and Digital Light Processing. Improvements in these digital video projectors, and their subsequent increased availability and desirability, resulted in a drastic decline of CRT projector sales by the year 2009., very few (if any) new units are manufactured, though a number of installers do sell refurbished units, generally higher-end 8" and 9" models.

Some of the first CRT projection tubes were made in 1933, and by 1938 CRT projectors were already in use in theaters.[2] [3] [4]

Advantages and disadvantages

Advantages

Disadvantages

Projector CRTs can be either air or liquid coupled. Air-coupled projector CRTs have a front flat face that also acts as a container with coolant, and there is an air gap between the face of the CRT and the flat back lens used for projecting the image formed by the CRT onto a screen. Liquid-coupled projector CRTs have a curved-inwards face with coolant and (on the side that faces the CRT's electron gun) a screen that is curved towards the inside with a dichroic coating, the coating increases light output[16] while the curvature conforms it to the curved back lens of the projector, reducing image halos. There is also no air gap between the CRT and the lens.[17] Glycol is hygroscopic (absorbs moisture) even through the silicon seals used in the CRTs to contain the glycol. This means that eventually the glycol can have too much water, breaking the glass of the container when it expands due to heat. This mainly affects air-coupled CRTs as in these the air bubble is on the same space as the container while liquid-coupled CRTs are not as affected since they have separate flexible silicone bellows which form the air bubble.[18] [19] The glycol may also react with the aluminum in the CRT cooling system and crystallize over many cooling and heating cycles creating CRT fungus, which degrades image quality since its optical properties are different than that of the surrounding glycol.[20]

See also

References

Notes and References

  1. Alan Burkitt, "Innovation in electronics". July 1982: Electronics Servicing & Technology magazine
  2. Web site: Baird/Rauland Projection CRT.
  3. Web site: Ardenne Projection CRT.
  4. Web site: Baird Theater Television System.
  5. Web site: CRT Projector Tube Life.
  6. Barco Cine 9, Sony G90
  7. Web site: Barco 912. barco.com. 2008-02-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20050321203743/http://www.barco.com/VirtualReality/en/products/product_specs.asp?element=885#. 2005-03-21. dead.
  8. Web site: Sony CRT Projector Specifications. www.curtpalme.com.
  9. Web site: Barco CRT CRT Projector Specifications. www.curtpalme.com.
  10. Web site: Video Bandwidth and Scanning Frequency Calculator. myhometheater.homestead.com.
  11. Web site: Dwin 500/700 Tips and Manuals. www.curtpalme.com.
  12. The Sony G70 weighs 83 kg and measures 36 x 70 x 95 cm whereas the Sony VPL-VW915ES projector weighs 20 kg and measures 22 x 56 x 50 cm
  13. Web site: Best 4K projector: Home theater beamers worth buying. 19 January 2022.
  14. Web site: Can a Projector be Too Bright?.
  15. Web site: CRT Projector Brightness.
  16. Web site: The Cathode ray Tube site. Television CRT's. www.crtsite.com.
  17. Web site: CRT Projector Liquid-Coupled (LC) vs Air-Coupled (AC). www.curtpalme.com.
  18. Web site: Bleeding CRT Projector Tubes. www.curtpalme.com.
  19. Web site: Venting Liquid Coupled (LC) tubes. www.curtpalme.com.
  20. Web site: CRT Tube Fungus Removal.