with modern processing power and computing vision software plus cheap, micro sized camera hardware we have today, a crt projector as such could be made to display a flawless image on a huge screen without any geometric distortions.
Thank you, I'm very happy to have found it. I bought it at an estate sale near my near my parents house a 6 months ago. The TV's history is pretty interesting. Back in the seventies, This was a state-of-the-art model costing well over 2 grand. The original owner was a doctor. After some time passed, the doctor needed some legal help (The man I bought the TV from is a lawyer) after doing the legal work, the doctor did not have the money to pay for the the lawyer fees. They ended up working out in agreement, and in place of the money that was owed, the doctor gave this guy the television as payment. Is fast forward to the year 2021, and I bought it at the lawyer's estate sale for $200. I don't expect to flip it for a profit, and I'm not sure if that's considered pricey for something so old, but I'm sure it's got some collectibility to it, and at the very least it was worth it to me.
Only thing that I can see that is amazing is 2 CRT tubes marketing all the color's. One not possible in my reality. Red blue and green is needed and there were tvs like this with them. Up to 55 inches to be exact. But to have only 2 tubes making the color's no didn't happen.
Yes it did. Sony also did a CRT projector with just one single full colour tube. This particular set uses one green monochrome tube and one twin gun blue/red tube. CRT rear projection TVs were available in 80" plus. JVC had an 82" or 84" model back in the 90s.
@@CaseTheCorvetteMan That's not information That's really available to everyone I seen them up to 73 inch and I'm talking about CRT. So red green and blue is needed for colors. But they can just have 2 that I know I've never seen 9ne with 1 full color tube That's actually cool.
@@NerfAlice O these sets one tube is green, the other tube has red and blue in the same tube. There were two Sony models very similar, a 60" screen and a 72" screen version. I am also talking about CRTs, i have serviced and repaired them for close to 3 decades and mostly did CRT projectors in both front and rear projection. There were two versions of the single tube Sony, one had a Betamax player built in, the other did not.
@@NerfAlice CRT rear projection could go as large as they wanted to make the screen up to 300", it just made no sense to go that large in a self contained cabinet when front projection was easily a better option and a lot more practical at anything 90" or more.
To be fair if you have ever had one of these try taking a pic on any good phone am see just how good your TV's pictures comes out I'm sure tho pictures look fine it's the phone camera think man 😊
If by back panel you mean the projection display, then yes. The large flat black rectangle that you see out in front of the TV is the projection mirror. The 2 circles in front of that are the RGB gun. The left gun projects the red and blue, and the right one projects the green.