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#31
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PVA= Poly Vinyl Acetate
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#32
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Here's another question regarding not reintroducing a bonding material between the tube faceplate and the now-clean "safety glass": If most of you who have performed de-cat procedures don't replace the old PVA with something, but leave an air gap between the two, what's the point of reattaching the old front glass? Is it to maintain the extended radius of the tube face as it was when it left the factory and therefore fit the metal tube mask of the front shroud better or does it really matter in regards to this fit? Otherwise the whole reattachment process seems pointless given that the notion of "safety glass" has been defeated by leaving out the glue that makes safety glass work.
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#33
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Quote:
It does seem likely that the greatest amount of impact resistance is from the tube itself, which is under compression from atmospheric pressure. I believe implosion requires that a sufficient uneven force or tension be developed in some part of the tube. |
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#34
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Not entriely unheard of, but some small rebuilder's didn't even re-install the bonded glass and not wanting to deal with PVA and that whole messy process. I have one such tube that's been installed for many years and I'm not concerned about it "imploding". I do prefer the more original look though, but it does make a sharp picture.
And I've seen (much) later rebuilds that had siliconed the faceplate in place, much as we do today. |
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#35
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Quote:
A little more to your point though is that the tube will bolt in as there is no "precision tolerance" in it's mounting and look good. And re-attaching the face does keep that original appearence and protect the "bulb" from getting scratched as mentioned. At least you can replace the front again if you need to and not risk any damage to the tube itself should something happen. |
| Audiokarma |
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#36
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many crt rebuilders left off the safety glass.i think channel master installed them.i dont care for the safety glass myself.some were so thick that it made the picture look out of focus.i have a nos rca hi lite that was never installed.jigged it up and it is awesome.this is being saved for something special like maybe a combo.the glass is slighly tinted and the picture is stunning
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#37
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Are you thinking about the deliberately etched tubes? They had a texture to diffuse reflections, but it did soften the picture a bit.
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#38
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I like the non-glare finish of the safety glass on the 21FJP22s, so that is one reason I would always reinstall it on any CRTs that I clean.
__________________
Chris Quote from another forum: "(Antique TV collecting) always seemed to me to be a fringe hobby that only weirdos did." |
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#39
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My CRT is coming along
After a few weeks of soaking, I've removed most of the broken faceplate, save for a few pieces.I took a pealed off piece and experimented. Acetone tends to soften the stuff pretty well. I soaked the remainder of the tube in acetone and this netted the softening of the bonding agent. A putty knife could dig out, and even better, dig between the agent and the glass, breaking the seal. I removed a few large pieces, leaving one piece (which doesn't want to be a team player), stuck to the glass. it's soaking now, and hopefully by tomorrow afternoon it'll have absorbed some acetone and softened to the point where I can get a putty knife in to break the seal and peel it off. Once it's gone, I'll wipe the tube and put it into my Zenith, where it belongs.... |
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