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These Sony TV were the gold standards of all televisions. Todays Oled tvs don't come close in quality build which Sony has put into their sets. I still own a 32" Sony Wega I purchase in 2006 and its still going strong to this day.
no joke, my family was really proud of our LV-1901. we had a TV room, with our old RCA Vista Color from 1960, and we had the Sony room. with the LV-1901. that RCA is long since gone, the Sony is still around, and in my living room.
I started in this industry in 2000. I used to tell people about features like "invar shadow mask" and "front silvered mirrors" that would help with "shadow detail" and "image accuracy". Those last two i still use when selling OLED TV's and full-array led's.
Best brand on TV ever. I had a Sony Triniton MOD_KV-1946R from 1981. A total beauty with colors only Sony could offer. An elegant TV that was build to last. I enjoyed it for 15 years when I replaced it for a Sony KV32. Still after that my kids used it couple of years more playing their video games.
I would have loved to have a Sony CRT back in the the day but I couldn't afford one. When I could afford my own new tv and when we went to HDTV I got a Sony. When I went to UHD I stayed with Sony. I even have Sony PlayStations, home theater, headsets and a Sony Xperia 1. I have a PSVR2 on preorder and I'm thinking of getting an 8k Sony next.
We have the first generation XBR with the detachable speaker. Didn’t get that foot control stand. I believe it came out a little later than 84 maybe around 86 as we got ours in 87. It broke around 95. But it was fixed and AFAIK it still works today. It is tuck away in our guest room. But we haven’t use it for a dozen years.
I have a friend that still has that TV at 0:59 but its broken right now but he place a 42 inch flat screen TV on top of it along with a playstation 5 next to it and use the old broken TV as a furnature.
I'm pretty sure there were actually only 2-3 different tapes at Sony, and all that diverse model line was nothing more than a marketing trick. The in-depth technical description refers to what 99% of customers don't nearly understand, neither they have capability to verify. Furthermore, even if there was a difference between these tapes, it couldn't be noticeable with low and mid grade cassette players.
Thanks for the memories. I left Pine Point in 1982 for another job south also remember the IGA manager well. Also the heavy equipment i operated at the mine. We used to call thedragline Twinkle toes
There's one color the Sony XBR (and other CRT displays) can show better than any flat screen: black. That's the key to color saturation, if the green and blue can't be turned off completely, the red will appear a bit brown, not the deep ruby red which was known as Sony Red, for the secret formula used in their red phosphor. Incidentally, the Sony shown at 0:54 is probably the heaviest console TV ever made, even weightier than those six-foot TV + Stereo combos made in the 1960s and early 1970s.
Great video reminded me when I was a kid, Holiday season of ‘85 my Dad had taken my Brothers and I to buy a new TV set in Valley Stream, NY. Went to several stores finally found a place that was a Sony Distributor. My Dad end up buying a XBR Trinitron but the Sony Audio system with Turntable, CD, Tape deck and Speakers. That was everyone’s Birthday and Christmas gifts for the next several years 😂😂😂. My Dad threw a party every time he had a chance. Fast forward years later I had taken the entire System with me to College even hooked up my original PlayStation barely made it to class from partying with it the System in my Freshman year, great times.