Naturally... in colour, a look inside a color picture tube factory.

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  • Опубликовано: 31 мар 2022
  • The story of the color tv picture tube.
    Film was made in the late 1970s, to see the in-line picture tube.
    Commissioned by Philips The Netherlands.
    Telecine : Ronald van Grinsven, source 16 mm film.
    www.marcelstvmuseum.com
    Marcel van Grinsven The Netherlands Europe 2022.
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Комментарии • 309

  • @erikziak1249
    @erikziak1249 Год назад +294

    Back in the days, where every household had a sophisticated linear particle accelerator. Some had even two or more.

    • @digitalradiohacker
      @digitalradiohacker Год назад +45

      Honey, he's teasing you -- Nobody has two television sets!

    • @erikziak1249
      @erikziak1249 Год назад +7

      @@digitalradiohacker I know, from a rerun.

    • @video99couk
      @video99couk Год назад +7

      I still use one, but for a very specific reason rather than nostalgia.

    • @renvilsekawan
      @renvilsekawan Год назад +3

      I still keep it

    • @OficinaSRMK-2
      @OficinaSRMK-2 Год назад +3

      Very good news!

  • @brasilianguy5437
    @brasilianguy5437 Год назад +33

    I can feel the smell of 70's by watching this movie. It is amazing.

    • @unlokia
      @unlokia Год назад

      Sadly the music is shite. And depressing

  • @rknud007
    @rknud007 Год назад +118

    Definitely the most complete look at how colour CRTs were manufactured, and no surprise that it came from Philips. My family had a Philips TV from 1977 that was still working in 1997. Quality, engineering and craftmanship of which we will likely never see again.

    • @fokinDim
      @fokinDim Год назад +1

      филипс уже давно не тот.

    • @ElectronicInspiration
      @ElectronicInspiration Год назад

      What type of tv was it?

    • @rknud007
      @rknud007 Год назад

      @@ElectronicInspiration A very similar model to this ruclips.net/video/QYBdOKpWTj4/видео.html

    • @rknud007
      @rknud007 Год назад +1

      @WirelessNut Yup, I've got a couple of those too. The only things that ever needed replacing were the belts.

    • @mattpat25
      @mattpat25 Год назад +3

      Have multiple Sonys working 20+ years later

  • @SpeakerFreak95
    @SpeakerFreak95 Год назад +39

    The amount of production that went into this, let alone the subject matter, is mind boggling for the time this was filmed and released.

  • @benmcreynolds8581
    @benmcreynolds8581 Год назад +19

    This is a million times better than "How it's made" ~That TV show is so boring. And I love learning about how things are made, and how things work.

  • @Owlero
    @Owlero Год назад +33

    This video only solidifies the fact that the CRT is one of the most complex and sophisticated inventions in human history.
    Every part, the tube, the shadow mask, the electron gun, the deflection yoke. All works of art. And they did it at a price and scale that nearly everybody could afford one.
    Now they're left to rot on roadsides and considered worthless. What travesty.

    • @CalviusSignatis
      @CalviusSignatis Год назад +7

      You'll be happy to know there's still a large group of retro gamers and enthusiasts rescuing, restoring and enjoying these CRT displays. I've got 5, with 3 in regular use and 2 as reserves 😊

    • @nuassul
      @nuassul Год назад +1

      Yo tengo tres de estas televisiones guardadas en mi casa ya que se las quiero mostrar a las futuras generaciones sobre esta tecnología extinta y que fue de ella.

    • @draalchemist
      @draalchemist 2 месяца назад

      Yo estoy aprendiendo a repararlas (tengo libros de circuitos) y este año me construiré el aparato para revivir los cátodos. Se pueden hacer funcionar hasta 10-15 años más con un mantenimiento de cátodos

  • @jayc2469
    @jayc2469 Год назад +19

    I worked for Philips (formerly Mullard Tubes) up until the early 2000's making 21" CRT's in the UK and this brought back memories!

    • @Remi_Jansen
      @Remi_Jansen 4 месяца назад

      my B&o mx4000 has a 21 inch philips tube made in the uk, maybe you made mine!

  • @manonmars2009
    @manonmars2009 Год назад +12

    I never knew that it took 24 hours to make a color television in this factory. That is very labor and materials intensive.

  • @erwinvb70
    @erwinvb70 6 месяцев назад +4

    I still have a large Philips television from 1980 in working condition, great to see how it was made.

  • @BLKBRDD
    @BLKBRDD 5 месяцев назад +9

    I find it amazing how sophisticated CRTs are. The fact that it was developed to a reliable point before LCD screens is mind boggling.

    • @EustaH
      @EustaH 16 дней назад +1

      That's only because LCD is even more sophisticated ;) With more screen layers, advanced molecular chemistry needed for efficient subpixels, electronics components printed directly in the screen surface and much more complicated control circuitry, not to mention advanced lighting like compact fluorescent or even mindblowingly hard to build properly marvel - white LED.

    • @cosmicsvids
      @cosmicsvids 7 дней назад

      @@EustaH Yeah the reasons tvs were crt in the first place is because yeah cheap microcontrollers is what made lcd and o led tvs possible. Modern tvs basically have computing in them.

    • @EustaH
      @EustaH 7 дней назад

      @@cosmicsvids That’s true, but my point is we made our current tech so cheap and so abundant that it seems easy and simple, so we are astonished how complicated and precise some things were 50 years ago.
      In reality the 1$ crap from china requires far more precise and complicated parts than this CRT - we’ve just got that good in making stuff.
      It’s like watching a true master playing an instrument - when he does it it looks effortless, while in reality a regular person wouldn’t be able to even position his fingers that way, let alone do it fast ;)

  • @henningokholm7912
    @henningokholm7912 Год назад +5

    Funny to have a look back at what I learned to repair. I do actually miss it.

  • @MoNsTeRiSkIcKaSs
    @MoNsTeRiSkIcKaSs 14 дней назад +1

    this video is a great lesson as to why these screens will never be made new again

  • @devjock
    @devjock Год назад +71

    I miss old Philips.. They had such a good run with the cassette tape, the cd, and many more innovative inventions.. Truly a company deserving the Netherlands' pride.. What happened? :(

    • @BlondieSL
      @BlondieSL Год назад +18

      And their TVs. They were one of the first to bring out modular sets.
      Those were the easiest to fix. There were 4 modules and in the service truck, we'd just carry the modules.
      Go into the house, analyze the issue, change the faulting module, take the old module as "trade-in" and head back to the shop.
      There, we'd pop the failed module into our jig, troubleshoot and repair the issue for the next call.

    • @devjock
      @devjock Год назад +5

      @@BlondieSL Aaah I love that! It's the best of both worlds. Efficient fast turnaround fixes, and serviceability that honors knowledge and expertise. Back when Philips wasn't on the planned obsolescence bandwagon. Good times!

    • @pyeltd.5457
      @pyeltd.5457 Год назад

      what happened? Nothing. Philips is still there as it was in the 1970s

    • @devjock
      @devjock Год назад +15

      @@pyeltd.5457 Philips completely got rid of their consumer tech department. They mostly do medical tech now, and right now they're in hot water due to that decision.

    • @a4andrei
      @a4andrei Год назад +8

      @@pyeltd.5457 Philips as it stands today, is only a shadow of its former self. It has sold the rights to its brand name to Chinese companies, which are the ones designing and manufacturing the TVs and home entertainment systems sold under the Philips name. The real Philips mostly produces medical equipment and LED lightbulbs (although I'm not entirely sure of the lightbulbs either). So it's a completely different company today, compared to the one in the 70s and 80s.

  • @repairitdontreplaceit
    @repairitdontreplaceit Год назад +24

    i worked in the tv repair game when valve colour sets came out , always wondered how they made the tubes and this was mazing to see . thank you very much for posing this marcel :)

  • @somecuntxxx
    @somecuntxxx Год назад +9

    Is nobody going to talk about that absolutely stupendous intro

  • @khoroshen
    @khoroshen Год назад +32

    What an engineering feat, at a time where you could not design and simulate everything on a computer at your desk.

    • @minirock000
      @minirock000 Год назад +2

      Didn't need artificial computers, they had slide rules. How those things work will be lost to time.

  • @spacecitysprockets
    @spacecitysprockets 5 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for transferring this crazy film!

  • @zsoltcseri9011
    @zsoltcseri9011 Год назад +22

    high-quality color picture tube with a long service life and excellent image quality, it is no coincidence that several European manufacturers have installed it in their devices, e.g. Grundig, Siemens, Zanussi, etc

  • @davidbowie2046
    @davidbowie2046 9 месяцев назад +2

    Even with this informative video I am still in disbelief how a TV works. What an amazing invention.

  • @juliangerardcascio1111
    @juliangerardcascio1111 Год назад +3

    That's when a TV 📺 was a TV 📺 😊and a wonderful picture 📸!!!!

  • @ok-xx1wy
    @ok-xx1wy Год назад +3

    This is actually insane and probably one of the best documentaries I’ve seen in awhile

  • @patrickmurawski400
    @patrickmurawski400 7 месяцев назад +2

    Still have a tv with Philips picture tube in it! Think picture quality is still better then ones today!!!!!

  • @akshayoval5476
    @akshayoval5476 Год назад +2

    Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) that's what my daddy had taught me when I was in 5th grade ....now I'm 33 years old ....miss u daddy....🥲🥲

  • @Kaelidoz
    @Kaelidoz Год назад +38

    What a vibe this documentary is...eerie at times. Your channel is awesome just discovered it, your website is pretty neat too.

    • @1sonyzz
      @1sonyzz Год назад

      but all of this is useless now because imagine carying smartphone with picture tube... Last TV with picture tube stopped working back in 2011 by that time nobody from family was watching the TV but rather using an internet, thus haven't been watching TV since that time nor do need one at home.

  • @videolabguy
    @videolabguy 2 года назад +18

    That was excellent. Detailed and very accurate information for a change. Thanks!

  • @miloud-en
    @miloud-en Год назад +2

    Thanks for this precious documentary

  • @Hassen78
    @Hassen78 5 месяцев назад +1

    كم أحب ذلك الزمن الجميل يا ليتني كنت أعيش هناك

  • @kkteutsch6416
    @kkteutsch6416 Год назад +5

    Between feb.1976 to aug. 1977 I was a technician in an Authoized Philips Service point at Brazil, where I could take the first color television service contact, that point was a Philco and Telefunken authorized service, also...

  • @bamaslamma1003
    @bamaslamma1003 Год назад +16

    Best video of how a CRT is made I've seen.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem Год назад +1

      What is it? Philips Belgium?
      You should watch the Trinitron content here, way more informative than this 1970 promo crap video

    • @TimPerfetto
      @TimPerfetto Год назад +1

      @@lucasrem Yeah I agree all this taught me was nobody should miss anything about the 70s

    • @TimPerfetto
      @TimPerfetto Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/W3G7b-DcOO4/видео.html

  • @SpacePortArcade
    @SpacePortArcade Год назад +11

    At 20:26 he says "from now on the shadow mask and the screen stay together for all remaining stages of production" and then almost immediately after at 21:02 "the screen and the shadow mask are separated".

    • @pe1dnn
      @pe1dnn Год назад +16

      They are not bonded yet but will be handled as a pair from now on. The shadow mask uniquely belongs to this screen and non other. You can't swap them as each have unique placement and the screen will get the florescent stripes to match. So they stay together, meant for each other but not yet married.

    • @tonytrade
      @tonytrade 6 месяцев назад +1

      19:57 there is still the distance piece between the glass and the mask to remove, and coat the screen so obviusly the screen and the mask are separated but handled like a pair.

  • @MrSoundman1955
    @MrSoundman1955 Год назад +5

    Insatlled quite a few of these when I was 17 - but only after "rejuvenating" the old tube had failed! They represent most of the weight of the TV set. Good old Radio Rentals would squeeze the last hours out of a tube before replacing it. Tubes were also dismantled and "re-gunned" to give them a second life.
    It's a good job this documentary was made on 16mm film which has outlived this whole technology. Now we can still watch that film, scanned to video and delivered down an old phone line to appear on you tube. A lot of very early video tape "films" are now lost and those that remain are very low resulution.

  • @i.c.a.productionsbyr.p.
    @i.c.a.productionsbyr.p. Год назад +1

    Very exhaustive and interesting documentary. Now my knowledge of the television is finally complete! This is the best documentary on YT!!!!

  • @EustaH
    @EustaH 16 дней назад

    Wow I never knew shadowmask is used not only as a component but also as a tool to build the screen! That's very clever way to ensure perfect match between mask and subpixels for every tube. I love it :D

  • @barriewright2857
    @barriewright2857 6 месяцев назад +2

    Watching the way of assembly, how Labour intensive it is just shows how far automation has come. And it's amazing how much the technology has come now we can build really large TV for indoor or outdoors and really thin practically like a wall picture frame amazing ! .

    • @B1-Han
      @B1-Han 6 месяцев назад +3

      Manufacturing CRTs today would still be labor intensive, regardless of how far automation has advanced. This is because CRTs have many individual complex components that require great precision to manufacture. Modern TVs (LCD, OLED) are completely different technologies, which in many ways are much easier to manufacture.
      Light and cheap plastic defeated heavy and expensive glass.
      New TVs (LCD at that time) literally immediately gained an advantage over CRT in such characteristics as dimensions, weight and energy consumption. But in terms of overall picture quality (not just pixel detail), LCDs and OLEDs have only recently begun to approach CRTs. And in some aspects of the image, modern TVs still cannot surpass CRT.
      For roughly the same reason, PDPs (plasma) also left the market. It was a very high-quality, but too complicated and too expensive technology compared to new plastic panels (which are basically just a lot of tiny LEDs).

    • @agl3083
      @agl3083 5 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@B1-Han ... Absolutely right, you correctly stated the essence of this topic !!! 😮

  • @radornkeldam
    @radornkeldam Год назад +8

    Sadly, a perfect demonstration of why there won't be any new CRTs made ever again.
    Recreating all this just isn't feasible within the industrial ecosystem today, and there's no way a single company could possibly manage it alone. CRTs are highly complex old high-tech.

    • @nuassul
      @nuassul Год назад

      A parte ya es tecnología obsoleta a pesar de su complejidad.

    • @cosmicsvids
      @cosmicsvids 7 дней назад

      Yeah but the only reason theres any need for them is cause old video game consoles don't display well on newer tvs. Yeah old game consoles look great on crts but new consoles look crap on them they are obsolete for everything except old consoles but emulating those fixes those issues.

  • @stephmaccormick3195
    @stephmaccormick3195 15 дней назад

    29:47 Love the 70's comedy relief.

  • @netowork3d
    @netowork3d Год назад +6

    Muita mão de obra especializada e equipamentos... muito treinamento, muitas pessoas... Uma Tv tinha o seu alto preço...

  • @jaapaap123
    @jaapaap123 Год назад +8

    I think this video gives a pretty good answer to the question why TVs were expensive.
    What I don't get is how not every TV from the same era cost about as much. I mean, in this production line not much seems to change when you make a tube only half the size.

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 Год назад +1

      It's for market differentiation, exploiting the perception that a bigger tv costs equally as much to make, so larger tvs had more profit margins for shareholders

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 Год назад

      It's for market differentiation, exploiting the perception that a bigger tv costs equally as much to make, so larger tvs had more profit margins for shareholders

  • @vasilis8208
    @vasilis8208 Год назад +1

    I recognise those blue Philips capacitors..

  • @lillyclarity9699
    @lillyclarity9699 7 месяцев назад +2

    did you know that it's one of the most successful color picture tubes in Europe?

    • @lillyclarity9699
      @lillyclarity9699 7 месяцев назад

      did they say that that often to be funny, or was it an earnest attempt to make sure that everyone *knew for sure* that Phillips was at the top of the market?
      almost 50 some years later it just feels goofy lmao

  • @BIGD-gj1vb
    @BIGD-gj1vb Год назад +3

    Absolutely astonishing. So the saying goes: "they don't make em like they used too". Hopefully someday a CRT rebuilding station can be resurrected to operation for us vintage tv collectors. Sadly, construction of the guns will be obsolete if not already for the most part. Cool video. Thanks for posting.

    • @GUILHERME-CRUD-4K
      @GUILHERME-CRUD-4K Год назад +1

      OLED screens are the only ones that come close to CRT screens don't have much lag

    • @imeakdo7
      @imeakdo7 Год назад

      There is one, at the early television museum

  • @hornox4life
    @hornox4life 5 месяцев назад +1

    Maybe one of the tubes visible here became one of the tvs I watched.

  • @pon2oon
    @pon2oon Год назад +7

    Humans are such unique, and clever creatures1

  • @hotgta
    @hotgta Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for sharing this video with us!!

  • @zhaohaigaogu7821
    @zhaohaigaogu7821 6 месяцев назад +1

    そこまで詳しい映像は少ないので大変素晴らしいと思いました。👍👏👏👏👏

  • @barrybretz6073
    @barrybretz6073 Год назад +1

    I remember installing black matrix picture tubes in some of the t.v.s who's tube got dim.

  • @MehdiGuizani
    @MehdiGuizani 4 месяца назад

    Best video ever

  • @jorgeandrade20
    @jorgeandrade20 10 месяцев назад +2

    Fascinating how it all came together!, I wonder if there's ANY company still producing CRTs in the world. I watched this and kept thinking: It's a lot of machinery to dispose of!

  • @gustavoleguizamonmunoz6365
    @gustavoleguizamonmunoz6365 5 месяцев назад

    Una maravillosa obra de alta ingeniería producto de la inteligencia humana,asombroso,un acelerador de particulas,como funciona el cañón de la pantalla es sencillamente asombroso.Great Job, Greetings.

  • @arepadetrigo
    @arepadetrigo 6 месяцев назад

    Fantastic technology and production techniques.

  • @robertonery8358
    @robertonery8358 Год назад +3

    Excelente postagem vale milhões de likes!!!

  • @ReinKayomi
    @ReinKayomi 5 месяцев назад

    The fact it's made by the same guys who made lightbulbs and the Hue system surprises me

  • @DemonKingOFFICIAL
    @DemonKingOFFICIAL Год назад +2

    When I was a kid, I looked at this tech as uninteresting. Now though, as an aspiring electrical engineer, I am captivated by these sorts of things. I really wish I had held on to our family’s old tv’s and such.

  • @ShannonWare
    @ShannonWare Год назад

    Television about television is the best television possible.

  • @ashave9100
    @ashave9100 Год назад

    Thank you-very enjoyable !!

  • @WinrichNaujoks
    @WinrichNaujoks Год назад

    Now I really want one of those TVs!

  • @realzneo
    @realzneo Год назад

    Fantastic film!!

  • @pitkinek007
    @pitkinek007 Год назад

    thx PHILIPS

  • @cll1out
    @cll1out Год назад +4

    Would love to see one of these tubes made in this factory carefully disassembled and looked at (a failed tube of course) particularly in the area of the shadow mask and whatnot

  • @aiyanaenterprise6543
    @aiyanaenterprise6543 Год назад +3

    thanks for upload...i was in manufacturing cpt & crt ( heds) singapore pte 1990--2001--under screen coating process/mixing

  • @johnpenner5182
    @johnpenner5182 Год назад

    this is fascinating! thxu for the upload.

  • @johnnycab1000
    @johnnycab1000 Год назад +5

    Just found your channel and watched this. Brilliant! A big Philips fan and yes I used to service their sets for friends back in the early 80s when needed, The G11, 22 along with ITT CVC 7 and 9 and Decca series as well, they had excellent Philips tubes in them. I loved TVs for the tech inside them and this video answered a good few of my questions as to the production techniques of the Tubes. What I enjoyed most is the people who were properly skilled built these, not a robot in sight. Thanks very much for putting it up here.

  • @intel386DX
    @intel386DX 2 года назад

    Thanks for the upload ! Fantastic video :)

  • @tony--james
    @tony--james Год назад

    YT Video, "The Craft of Picture Tube Rebuilding " brought me here!, awesome stuff!

  • @dw8840
    @dw8840 Год назад +2

    So when the vacuum is pumped, do they attach a suction tube to the stem while in the oven?

  • @A3Kr0n
    @A3Kr0n Год назад +2

    I doubt we'll ever get one of those color TVs. All we have is a black and white set. Takes forever to warm up, too.
    -me as a kid

    • @madigorfkgoogle9349
      @madigorfkgoogle9349 Год назад +1

      well as a kid a one school year lasted.... for EVER.
      Now forever doesnt last a school year at all.

  • @rafaelasuncion7075
    @rafaelasuncion7075 Год назад +1

    Unos de los inventos más maravilloso e ingenioso de este mundo... hecho en USA.

  • @michael_mouse
    @michael_mouse Год назад

    ... excellent video!

  • @minimaxxl8
    @minimaxxl8 2 года назад +9

    Mooie video. Nog opvallend veel handwerk.
    Jammer dat deze high-tech met de komst van de flatscreen binnen 15 jaar compleet verdwenen was.
    Nu staan er huizen op de plek waar dit ooit gefilmed is. Alleen de straatnamen herinneren nog aan de onderdelen van een beeldbuis

    • @mjouwbuis
      @mjouwbuis Год назад +1

      Het zou ook in Aken gefilmd kunnen zijn, ik weet eigenlijk niet wat er verder met die fabriek gebeurd is. Het handwerk is later wel wat meer geautomatiseerd, maar in Heerlen werd het in elk geval voor kleine series ook grotendeels nog met de hand gedaan.

    • @TimPerfetto
      @TimPerfetto Год назад

      O mae dy wallt mor deg ac rwy'n ei fwyta drwy'r amser gyda fy nannedd a llwybr treulio yn cael eu tagu a dwi'n pesychu peli o dy wallt ac o fy oh oh o o

  • @ahyonvlogs
    @ahyonvlogs Год назад

    So astinishing to see !!!

  • @hopelessnerd6677
    @hopelessnerd6677 5 месяцев назад +2

    Ah, the days when we let our kids sit on the floor with their faces stuck in front of an X-ray source for hours. Life was better then.

  • @andrewlankford9634
    @andrewlankford9634 Год назад +2

    This sort of manufacturing wizardry is now in Asian factories where they make flat screens.

  • @JohnPlant90
    @JohnPlant90 Год назад +2

    All that amazing equipment suddenly became obsolete

  • @kabitaniasaas3368
    @kabitaniasaas3368 5 месяцев назад

    Philips oyeeeee ❤

  • @Emre-Sunay-Gebes
    @Emre-Sunay-Gebes Год назад

    greatly informative!

  • @keyewhoknows2409
    @keyewhoknows2409 Год назад

    I have learned that in the mid 80's and was 20 Years at this business as Radio and TV-Engineer.....time flies- meanwhile i develop Wiring harness at a germany car manufacturer. Good old repair times

  • @maksimb1853
    @maksimb1853 6 месяцев назад +1

    На некоторых участках на заводе конкретно экономили на освещении.

  • @fmbroadcast
    @fmbroadcast Год назад

    Wooow beautifull

  • @statiz23
    @statiz23 5 месяцев назад

    Good memories with crt tvs i see them dying between 2008-2010

  • @hvoltage1524
    @hvoltage1524 5 месяцев назад

    It baffles me that we as humans figured out how to firstly, harness electricity and use it for lights, but then figured out a way to project images on a screen like this. Even just in black and white is crazy.

  • @luispr512010
    @luispr512010 11 месяцев назад

    It became a animation in the 80s

  • @omsingharjit
    @omsingharjit Год назад

    Crt was built by these Beautiful lays !! Nyc

  • @TheOpticalFreak
    @TheOpticalFreak Год назад

    Prachtig stukje technologie!
    Es war einmal! 😌

  • @devananadmandal8607
    @devananadmandal8607 Год назад

    Ver good video is good

  • @omergebes6105
    @omergebes6105 Год назад

    Eski tüplü tv miz hala duruyor. Artık saygıyla bakıyorum. Muhteşem bir emek ve teknoloji ürünüymüş. 😌

  • @thindarogiancola9358
    @thindarogiancola9358 2 года назад +1

    2:53 ... TRC 's facctoring .Philips Cores Sempre Vivas ! 80's

  • @Sloposse
    @Sloposse Год назад +4

    #29:50 worker busted watching soft core lol

    • @pizzablender
      @pizzablender Год назад +1

      We wouldn't have that in today's business promo films, would we? How far we have fallen...

  • @BendeMartinez
    @BendeMartinez Год назад

    Bravo bravo bravo

  • @zorkonthegreat5879
    @zorkonthegreat5879 Год назад +3

    And for the most part assembled by pretty girls.

  • @Fernando-Rodriguez
    @Fernando-Rodriguez 8 месяцев назад +2

    no wonder CRTs won't make a comeback as nobody will invest billions of dollars on rebuilding these factories

  • @h0ll0wm9n
    @h0ll0wm9n Год назад +1

    Thx for sharing this superb, comprehensive documentary!
    My only question is why Philips chose to use crappy 16mm film to photograph a short documentary about COLOR PICTURE tubes? If Philips -- given their deep pockets in 1970s -- had used the best quality 35mm film (and camera systems), this documentary would have looked much more professional. Not like some college film project.

    • @filmpjesman1
      @filmpjesman1 Год назад

      Arguably, it could be an issue with this scan of the film. 16mm isn't bad per se with a good scan, and direct projection would probably have been easier with 16mm

  • @Darkerfoxtech
    @Darkerfoxtech 5 месяцев назад

    Man that music went in a creepy direction there around the 22 minute😅

  • @JosephJoseph-vb1jb
    @JosephJoseph-vb1jb 9 месяцев назад +1

    I stop use it for long time but I'm sure it was working good that time but when I tried turning it again the screen is not working

  • @digitalblasphemy1100
    @digitalblasphemy1100 Год назад

    I didn't realize how late these were hand made.

  • @telocho
    @telocho Год назад +2

    model type A66-510X

  • @marconoboa1154
    @marconoboa1154 Год назад

    Back when companies were proud and happy to share their matured developments instead of safekeeping to even costumer services technicians

    • @madigorfkgoogle9349
      @madigorfkgoogle9349 Год назад +2

      well, it was patent protected and no one else could make it without license anyway, so why would they hide it?
      And just a small hint from another non native English speaker, you did mean CUSTOMER services, costumer is making clothes...😉

  • @jasonrusso9808
    @jasonrusso9808 Год назад +1

    first color tv, 1954

    • @thindarogiancola9358
      @thindarogiancola9358 Год назад

      @jasonrusso9808 Philips ? i love FritsPhilips .evoluon 1966 LP Nara Leão manha de liberdade philips logo, date comemorativo

  • @UniversumPL
    @UniversumPL 6 месяцев назад

    niesamowite że tak archaiczna technologia istniała do późnych lat 2000

    • @agl3083
      @agl3083 5 месяцев назад

      Archaiczna czy nie, aż do 2000 roku nie było zamiennika dla tej technologii !!! 😮

  • @user-pb4jg2dh4w
    @user-pb4jg2dh4w Год назад

    What is the name of these background music i really love this type of music (old)

  • @netowork3d
    @netowork3d Год назад

    A Philips tinha uma qualidade de imagem muito avançada...