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- Path: sparky!uunet!ogicse!reed!news
- From: rseymour@reed.edu (Robert Seymour)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: Sony 1304 monitor affected by speakers?
- Keywords: sony, monitors, trinitron, apeture grill
- Message-ID: <1992Nov13.004146.24537@reed.edu>
- Date: 13 Nov 92 00:41:46 GMT
- Article-I.D.: reed.1992Nov13.004146.24537
- References: <275@opel.secondsource.COM>
- Sender: news@reed.edu (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: rseymour@reed.edu
- Organization: Reed College, Portland, OR
- Lines: 61
-
- In article <275@opel.secondsource.COM> johnk@opel.secondsource.COM (John
- Kennedy) writes:
- > In article <wright.55.0@lims01.lerc.nasa.gov> wright@lims01.lerc.nasa.gov
- (Ted Wright) writes:
- > -In article <Bwr6CK.L0G@da_vinci.it.uswc.uswest.com>
- plyall@lookout.it.uswc.uswest.com (Pete Lyall) writes:
- > ->From: plyall@lookout.it.uswc.uswest.com (Pete Lyall)
- > ->Subject: Sony 1304 monitor affected by speakers?
- > ->I use a Sony 1304 monitor, and when I had a light background up, I
- > ->noted that there appeared to be a large dirty horizontal band...
- > -
- > -If you mean the faint horizontal stripe about 2/3 of the way down the
- > -screen, I believe that all Trinitron picture tubes in computer monitors
- > -have this. We have about 20 Sieko monitors with trinitron tubes that
- > -do this. Every Sony monitor I have seen does this. This does not appear to
- > -be fixable.
- >
- > Actually, there are two such bands, about 1 pixel high each. These are not
- > "fixable", because they are part of the design. Because the Trinitron tube
- is
- > cylindrical in shape, rather than a spherical section, the screen is divided
- > into three areas. These two lines are the borders between those areas.
- >
- > --
- > John Kennedy uunet!opel!johnk
- > Second Source, Inc. johnk@secondsource.COM
- > Annapolis, MD
-
- Actually, that's not quite right (or this is what it sounds like to me
- at least...). The trinitron tube is indeed cylindrical (though not divided),
- but what causes the above problem is the design of the shadowcast. In all color
- monitors, the regions of different colors are divided by a dark contrast space.
- In convential shadow-mask (i.e. tridot) this is caused by the fact that
- the glass has a dark coarting except where the phosphor dots are placed. The
- three electron guns then fire excited electrons at the dots, which emit light
- at the proper frequency and luminance.
- However, in a trinitron tube (patented by Sony Electronics), the
- scenario is wholly different. A trinitron monitor has one large electron gun
- which fires through a series of thin wires called an aperture grill(e). The
- three electron beams are shot through a coaxial magnetic field, shine throuhg
- the grill, and strike the glass.
- The apeture grill is made of many thin wires running parallel in a
- vertical orientation. Each space in between two wires is a single color the
- height of the scan height (i.e. # of scan lines / vertical area covered). These
- colors are staggered after each scan to reduce banding.
- When the apeture grill become large (it must be a good distance away
- from the gun, then vibrations or stress can cause the grill to move (each wire
- is held under tension at only the top and bottom. To prevent wavering of the
- image, a horixontal wire is run along the apeture grill so that vibrations will
- be countered by the additional structural integrity of the stabilizing wire.
- This horizontal wire is what you see on your scree. Since it runs
- parallel to the scan, it is sometimes noticable as a shadow across a bright
- background. On a CPD-1304 or CPD-1320 (multisynchronous version), there is one
- such stabilizing wires. Larger tubes often have two or in rare cases three
- stabilizing wires.
-
- --
- Robert Seymour rseymour@reed.edu
- Departments of Physics and Philosophy
- Artificial Life Project Reed College
- Reed Solar Energy Project (SolTrain) Portland, OR
-