Hello Gentlemen,
Thank you for the kind & encouraging replies.
Yes, i was (am) the pipe smoker at ETF 2005.
I do not have a big American car (loved them seeing them in California in the late 50s & 60s). Parking in Paris is akin to living in Manhattan, and a full size sedan virtually guarantees spending 2 hours to find a suitable parking space.
To come back to vintage color TVs and answer Pete's question:
> Could you bring us up-to-date on the equipment you use here.
Gladly! As you all know, France has always adopted the strangest TV standards over & over and its SECAM color system faithfully follows the tradition. So if you want to collect TVs in this country and watch something else than a grey piece of glass, the capacity to generate other world standards is mandatory.
I come from a broadcast culture (i.e. 15 years with Ampex for instance) so i adopted a pro system approach. Sources are:
French terrestrial DVB-T
French terrestrial "L" norm SECAM
French Digital cable
UK Sky Digital (satellite)
DVD (Zone 1 & 2), S-VHS PAL, VHS PAL/SECAM
Everything goes into a matrix router.
Signal processing includes:
2 x Prosumer PAL/SECAM & vice/versa transcoders
2 x PAL/SECAM/NTSC digital standards converters
Separate DAs on all router outputs.
For NTSC transmission, i've built several transmitters over the years, but lately i've been so happy with this Greek 100mW quasi-broadcast unit, that i've standardized on this model:
http://www.aspisys.com/tvpll.htm
I initially started with their first model about 3 years ago. I chose to repackage the unit because of a few minor quirks such as "hot" running +5V & +12V regulator with no heat sinking & because of personal preferences for a metal enclosure in power RF applications rather than plastic boxes.
The newer model portrayed in the link above will actually broadcast in all current broadcast standards : NTSC "M", PAL B/G/I, SECAM L, DK...
*i have no link to this Co, other than being a satisfied customer.
I run most of my TVs daily. My philosophy is "run them & enjoy them", non-used electronics stored in boxes see the caps rot and they die.
I have a strong fetish for Panasonic TravelVision micro-TVs, especially the extraordinary 1.5" color CRT CT-101, all Trinitron models from 5" to 9", plus the CT-100 and a few others (Motorola VT-71...)
Not having much display space myself, i try to encourage others to jump onto the Real Vintage Color bandwagon, i.e. US sets.
Now a brief rundown on the status of the 4 roundies in France :
my CT-100: Works well, need to tweak the convergence with a set of new magnets received from Scott M. Will be using it with a new NTSC transmitter on the VHF low band (2-6) as it has some degree of IF disalignment on the high VHF Channel. There is NO WAY i will try to align a 7 stage "world's most difficult" IF strip.
Wilfrid's RCA CTC-9A, Blonde, 1959 is coming along well. The set has raster and the CRT had 100% emission, measured before purchase (big Thanks! to Harry P. of NJ) An NTSC modulator was received last week.
The set sorely needs a new 6DQ5 (H Out) and BTW, he is/i am interested in sourcing NOS TV tubes to have spares on hand according to the SAMS tube list.
Roundie #3 is Christopher's Zenith 5527U 21" color console 1962. The TV was in operational condition before departure from the US. A full convergence job must be performed as of course, it is shipped with the deflection yoke & convergence assy removed from the CRT neck to avoid breakage in transit.
Roundie #4 is Jean-Francois's RCA 21-CD8866 "Anderson" 1958. Condition unknown, other than complete and a rather used CRT. The set has not arrived in France yet. Jean-Francois is the curator of a beautiful mammoth vintage radio collection at the "Musee de la communication" near Angers, 200 miles out of Paris:
http://www.musee-communication.com
As he lives in the CASTLE where the collection is located (lucky guy!) he also has his own TV collection in the same location. Jean-Francois has a Predicta, Philco Safari, VT-71, in a nutshell, it's growing...
So, this pretty much sums up the status of US early color sets in France.
What amazes ME, is the amount of data, parts, knowledge and goodwill available on US early color. Early Euro color is very shrouded in secrecy. To speak of France, finding info on Henri de France (inventor of SECAM) is extremely difficult, i have only ONE picture of a SECAM prototype using an RCA 21" round tube, schematics, history, development info is near zilch, very discouraging.
Guess i will wrap this up for today after this long message. If you've read until the end, Thank You!
2 short questions:
- Would you have the HV focus transformer rewound (John Folsom Jr) on the CT-100 as preventative maintenance ?
Do any of you know something about Sony Indextron KVX-370 Beam-Index TV repairs ? 1 of my 2 Indextrons recently conked out (audio FM hiss, no scan). I have a full pdf service manual file free for the asking if someone is interested inthis set.
Pictures : Me (no pipe ;-) near CT-100
Wilfrid's Blonde RCA 1959
Christopher's 5527U 1962 Zenith
Jean-Francoi's RCA 21-CD8866 "Anderson" 1958.
Best Regards
jhalphen@dial.oleane.com
Paris/France