deezdrama wrote: ↑Thu Nov 16, 2023 3:54 am
Pretty amazing watching clips of movies on this even though it seems to be in need of servicing and calibration.
Colors and contrasts just pop like an oled. Really makes you see how crap the first 10-15 yrs of lcds were.
The flat panel crt they were developing at the same time as lcd's.... The display had an electron gun for each phosphor dot.... Imagine how cool them would of been if the cheap and lighter lcds didnt take over.
Anyway, ill eventually recap deflection and power circuits and reseat the yoke. Will do some lag testing in 540p/1080i from the pc, the scaler, and will try a 540p modeline in mister.
Definitely going to have to watch some movies on this thing.
I think you are talking about the SED tech for the flat CRT panels, correct? Seems they could still be a viable option had the tech just not been abandoned because of cheap LCD tech. Looks like it could have been an incredible display tech.
As far as your set, looks fantastic to me! What size /model is this again? A Toshiba 26hf84a? lol it looks MUCH larger than a 26" in your photos. From the pics it looks like a Trinitron style aperture grille and not a slot mask, is that correct? I wasnt really keen on getting a 16:9 CRT but dang it man now youve gone and messed that up for me.
What in particular are you seeing that makes you think it needs servicing? Its hard to see in the still photos, but the geometry, convergence, and even color appears excellent in the Sonic photo. You mentioned reseating the yoke--does it appear that it has moved / been jarred out of place? What specifically are you aiming to improve by doing that?
If you have a link to the service manual, please post here, I'd like to check it out. *EDIT, link below:
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/13151 ... =27#manual << Wow, what incredibly easy to understand and concise adjustment procedures this manual has-- unlike the cryptic Sony manuals, which often tell you to connect different "jigs" here and there when taking measurements and offer near zero advice on setting white balance/grayscale, etc.
Looking forward to see what resolutions it can handle and how it handles them (natively or scaled), as well as some sweet macro-shots of more content. This is a spec sheet Ive found from the owners manual. 79 lbs?! Its literally 3x lighter than the Sony 4:3 HD monsters!!
