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Color TV In Hospitals
Watching multiple hours of classic TV, I noticed that they would often show color TV's in hospitals on shows. I know that was Hollywood, but does anyone remember color sets in hospitals in the 60's in real life ?
Someone uploaded a 1965 color episode of Dr. Kildare (when's the last time you saw that show ?) on you tube and they showed the staff in a waiting room watching a roundie color console. They were keeping updated on a forrest fire that brought in multiple victims. |
In Kingsport, TN the principal hospital had no in-room TVs in the late sixties. I recall loaning my GE portacolor to a friend imprisoned there about 1968 or so. They kept you for a week or two for minor procedures then- it's out the door same day now.
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I stayed in a hospital for a week in 1968 when I was 8 years old, and my mother rented a TV for me in my room. (That was how it was done there, the rooms did not have TVs "standard" in them.) It was some kind of maybe 23" B&W on a cart (or a floor model on casters maybe), with a wired remote control. I remember the "off" position was where UHF would commonly be, below channel 2, and I think maybe a couple of UHF stations were converted to unused VHF channels as was common on cable TV later. The channel-changing motor was really fast and only went one way, so if I missed a channel I had to go around again, including turning the TV off and back on. That was the first time in my life I had control of a TV set myself.
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I was in the hospital at UCLA in the mid 70s, and they had a few Quasar II hybrid 22" color sets... Not in the rooms though. I was in a ward with 15 or 20 beds, and it had 1 of those Quasars. It broke once, and the custodian brought in a beat-up old Magnavox 19" B&W tube set while the Quasar was being fixed. Later, in visiting hospitals, I saw various TVs through the late 70s including swingarm-mounted Sony 5" color sets (KV-5100 modified for hospital use). By the late 80s, most hospitals around Los Angeles had 19" color sets for each bed. Northridge Hospital; one of the best in LA, now has mainly Zenith LCD sets at each bed. Glendale Adventist has Zenith 19" CRT sets.
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When I had my tonsils out in the early 80s they had those swingarm 5" Sony sets. Very cool at the time...at least that first night. After getting "knifed" at 6am the next morning I didn't care much about that Trinitron!
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I recall seeing Zenith System 3's (early 80's ones) in Coney Island Hospital, Brooklyn, NY circa 1995.
Bet they're gone now though (!!) |
Yes same here, actually Marshall hospital uses system 3's and the Mercy Hospial in Folsom uses those too I believe, some big rooms actually have 27" sets still. Most look almost dead although, ping out of focus rasters. You can tell the CRT's are tired. They still have them though.
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Back in the '80's, the hospital that we used had mid '70's Sylvania GT-matic hospital TV's. They were the type with the motorized one way tuner where UHF was the "off" position. The remotes were plugged into a socket by the bed. In the early '90's, I actually got my hands on two or three of these sets. They were heavy as lead and used, IIRC, the E08 chassis. They used a power transformer and a delta gun CRT. I think the same hospital had some E53 Sylvania's with a single knob motorized varactor tuner and inline CRT and some E32's with cable ready tuners. Sometime in the late '80's, most of these sets were replaced by 20" cable ready Magnavox sets. I think these sets were recently replaced by black box Philips hospital sets.
Some of the other local hospitals that I've visited people in had a mix of Zenith system 3's, Sylvania's, and RCA XL100's. As far as hospital sets that I've had over the years; I've had E08, E32, and E53 Sylvania's, an early 70's tube type color RCA, a mid '70's 19" RCA XL100 with the stand up chassis, some mid '90's (junk) Zenith "new horizons" sets, and an early '70's GE 19" color (don't remember the chassis). All had the jack on the rear for the plug in remote control. |
I once bought a used Sony KV-1310 set that had been modified by a California company for hospital use. It had two US-made isolation transformers added, and all of the knobs were changed to non-chromed versions, presumably to pass AC leakage tests. It had a whoppin' hospital grade three wire plug, and the ground connection went only to the Faraday shield on the isolation transformers and the center tap of the internal 300:75 ohm balun. The transformers were a tight fit, and had to be paralleled. It was about 8 years old then, but still sparkly-clean inside, with no yellowing of any labels. Great picture too.
I converted it back to normal for my use, and still have the two 300VA isolation transformers. Cheers, |
FindmKeepm, that Sony sounds great. Almost as if they liked the design (or Sony's reputation) so much that 'they' decided it was the TV for the job... But yeah they last just about til the crt is gone, so it is a great hospital set
Here's a question: When did society start getting picky about color TV? (hard to pinpoint a year) |
Here in California, it seemed in the mid to later 80's that if you owned a Trinitron, you were high class. I know it seems odd but that's the way it was. I would say 1985 ish?
I've always had love for my RCA's and Zenith's.. Guess it's the midwest kid in me, being from Michigan. |
Every horsepistol TV I've seen has been cut from the same cloth as Motel sets-but they MIGHT have been in a bit better state of repair than motel sets...A lot of 'em have had the same convergence/lousy pic issues as the motel sets did, but not as many impact marks, cigarette burns, etc...
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Just today, I was talking to a friend who started repairing TV's in the early '70's. Come to find out that our hospital had RCA sets before they had those mid '70's Sylvania's. He said he worked on some of them and some were tube type and some were SS.
That tube type RCA hospital set that I had seemed to be better built, with a better quality PC board, than the consumer version of that set. It still had a good picture after I replaced the horizontal output tube (31JS6, IIRC). I wish I still had it. |
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They had a few like that, depending on what program they were associated with. We had a 19" Sony at the time (with the tuner below the CRT), and I remember my brother thinking we were S**T hot for having it. Cheers, |
Interesting thread.
I have a vague memory (any memory I have of when I was 4 is vague) of being in a room with a bunch of kids at Providence Hospital in Southfield, MI, the room had no beds, some books and toys, and a color roundie (perhaps a "pediatric waiting room" - I had skin surgery done the night before). There were no TVs in rooms with beds. |
I have a 1968 19" RCA Hospital set with the CTC 27 chassis. It used a wired remote with internal speaker. In an ad I saw for it, they called it a "pendant"
When visiting someone at a hospital by me,(they were in the oldest wing) I found in their room the plug for the pendant still on the wall with the "RCA" logo on it and a newer Zenith 25" sitting on the suspended from the ceiling metal shelf. You could tell the shelf was made for the CTC 19/CTC 27 series RCA's as it looked as if it could support the weight of a car! |
First off, let me just say whats up to captainmoody. I remember really enjoying a lot of your threads when i first joined but then didnt see you on as much. And you bring up another cool subtopic here...the shelves themseleves (lol) saw many many swivel wall mounts in both home and institutional settings like hosps and schools. Got a bldg in town that has an early 80s maggie on one of these, looks like crap by now probably ran round the clock.
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In the late 1940s or early 1950s, this little 8" TV was marketed in the Detroit area for hospital use. Branded "HOSPIX", it is identical to the better known Arvin model 400T, except for the green two-tone paint job, the HOXPIX logo, and a headphone jack at the back.
I have no idea how many of these were made, or how widely they were marketed. It must be one of the earliest hospital TV sets. Anyone know anything more about the HOSPIX? OK, its NOT a color TV. My bad! |
No, but I bet they're more rare than Hen's Teeth...
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color TV use in medicine....
of course separate from the use of TV color or b/w for patients ... medical use of television ..especially color tv begin pretty early and color tv using field sequential systems began in the late 40s.
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