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#16
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I dunno, fellers.. I had Terry restore my 1949-50 12" Zenith Porthole "Claridge", & it NEVER fails to generate all manner of grins & compliments..Especially from young people, who likely as not have ever SEEN a largish B/W TV..My little "Girlfriend", Bethany, came home w/another "Army Wife", & I showed off to them my Zenith Porthole Claridge...The gal wrote me on Facebook about how KEWL all my Junque was & how she appreciated me taking the time to show all of it off to her..I couldn't have been happier if I'd found a million bux in my backyard..I HOPE someday she comes back, & brings her Hubby so I can "Show Off" my Electronic Junque to him..We NEED to try to get the Twentysomethings involved in this hobby..They're the ones we gotta impress..
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Benevolent Despot |
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#17
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I expect all composite outputs will be gone shortly and all the converter boxes, dvd player etc will be long dead. Yea you can get a hdmi to composite converter box right now but I dont know anyone who has invested in one, and who knows if hdmi will even be around in 20 years. I guess everyone is in denial about this |
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#18
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Hey, we can all still watch our B&K test pattern generators.
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#19
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And so television will become as it once was, a very small enthusiastic group of people staring at test patterns in amazement.
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#20
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Hold on. There will still be a lot of old composite junk around. Further, you only need a few transitors to generate a signal. Generating a 525 signal via 2032 computing equipment should be a cinch.
The problem is with later generation audio/video equipment: as technology moves on, it will be too complicated. Consider this: as video and audio recording formats comes and go, the original audio formats will still allow the retrieving of content. The status of motionn picture 35mm film is in jeopardy. But I did read that the Library of Congress is still making 78 RPM recordings of the most important sounds of the past century.This is to ensure that many centuries from now, as technology evolves, at least the audio may be retrieved by simply spinning the disc and placing a pointed object in the groove. |
| Audiokarma |
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#21
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I agree it should never become too difficult to convert from whatever technology comes down the pipe into a composite signal. Unless for some reason there's a sudden loss of basic discrete circuit function intelligence. And some days I actually wonder about that possibility, with all the program driven hardware used these days.
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#22
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The efforts by the MPAA/RIAA/MafiAA to shut down the so-called "Analog Hole" aren't helping the situation a bit, either.
I just helped a friend set up a new home theater system, complete with a 55" display. The receiver/blueray player was all HDMI for inputs and outputs, and the display had 4 HDMI inputs and only a single analog video input which was labeled as being intended for a game console. We ended up using it for a VCR input, and connecting the kid's Wii console through the video inputs on the VCR. In a few more years, i fully expect to see analog video inputs completely eliminated. Laptops and even desktop computers are already ditching VGA and even DVI outputs for HDMI. Even the little "Raspberry Pi" computer boards, which are marketed as playthings for hardware hackers have adopted HDMI, which is just about the epitome of closed access, walled garden, DRM encumbered garbage. |
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#23
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Well, here's another one. Look at the seller's comments:
"...People often take the shells of old tvs and make fish tanks and I think that is what this one was used for...." http://www.ebay.com/itm/1956-RCA-Vic...item2a275f5476 |
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#24
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Steve McVoy's right. I don't loose sleep over any set made post-49 (or maybe post-50) that gets fishtanked. With rare exceptions.
The 46-48 Sets are another matter. Up until the 4th quarter of 1948 there were only about 500,000 post-war sets manufactured by all vendors combined. It wasn't until the end of 1948 that TV production really took off. It must have been a special Christmas present for many familes that year. The good news is that those sets rarely seem to be affected by such (as defined by us) deviant behavior.
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#25
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| Audiokarma |
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#26
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That RCA console cabinet probably has a flat screen TV inside, since there is a fraction of an inch of space at the left-hand side of the CRT mask (look at the picture of the cabinet in the eBay listing to see what I am referring to). That or else the tube in the "new" TV chassis the seller replaced the old one with isn't quite large enough, again by a fraction of an inch (!), to fit the mask. The seller's statement that he or she "cleaned out the insides" of the cabinet is another tipoff that the old chassis was likely replaced with a modern flat set.
BTW, it doesn't do anyone much good to complain when these eBay sellers offer for sale vintage or antique TV cabinets with flat screens inside, and possibly a modern DVD/VHS or Blu-ray player on top; it happens all the time these days, and shows no signs of slowing down. Please bear in mind that many if not most of these people could not care less about the value of the old TV that was originally in the cabinet, which is why the conversion is made in the first place and the old set gotten rid of. Moreover, these folks are not, by and large, electronics experts, so they probably wouldn't know the first thing about repairing a 50+-year-old TV anyway. I see no harm in preserving a classic or antique TV cabinet and installing a modern flat screen inside it, possibly cutting a hole in the front of the cabinet where the name plate or original pencilbox formerly resided (with a nice woodgrain border framing the hole if looks are a concern), so the remote sensor and control buttons are accessible. This way, at least the cabinets, which 50+ years ago were made of real wood, were heavy, and deserve to be preserved for future generations, would be saved from a certain death (by rotting of the wood, insects, rodents, etc.) in a landfill. I would love to be able, someday, to put my video system in a cabinet like that, but since I live in a small apartment, I must make do with a converted utility cart made of pressboard and heavy woodgrain cardboard. (My computer and stereo system are installed on a similar type of desk, with the stereo's main unit on what was the printer stand and my laser printer on the floor.) Too bad, but that's the way of it.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 12-23-2012 at 02:52 PM. |
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