T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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5106.1 | The line is normal | SOOMEE::davis | Mark W. Davis 206.865.8749 | Mon Oct 07 1991 13:00 | 5 |
| The thin line you see is the tensioning woire for the monitors aperture grill.
ALL trinitron monitors have these lines. The larger monitors have two. It is
normal.
mark
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5106.2 | addendum to previous reply | DECWET::DAVIS | Mark W. Davis 206.865.8749 | Mon Oct 07 1991 13:17 | 9 |
| Pardon the spelling on the previous note, I was trying XNotes and
couldn't figure out how to delete-still can't. Anyway, Field, er...
Digital Services get many calls logged from users of workstations with
the VRT1x trinitron monitors on the exact "problem". The line is one
of the trade offs for the crisp, clean, bright, drool drool...display
of the Trinitrons. enjoy.
mark (trying to decide on a multisync monitor & FF combination)
|
5106.3 | Why 2/3 down? | VERGA::MACDONALD | Home of Digital Realtime Pubs | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:38 | 2 |
| Any technical reason for it being 2/3 of the way down the screen (13"
monitor) rather than say half-way?
|
5106.4 | Thanks Again | VERGA::MACDONALD | Home of Digital Realtime Pubs | Mon Oct 07 1991 14:59 | 8 |
| Fascinating .. I just took a look at one of the 19" Trinitron's in the
lab, and sure enough, two lines - one 1/3 down and a second 2/3 down
the screen.
[Nice monitor BTW]
Thanks for saving me from pulling boards tonight!
|
5106.5 | | STAR::GUINEAU | but what was the question? | Mon Oct 07 1991 15:19 | 9 |
| I had the same line on my monitor (Sieko 1450) which also has a trinitron tube.
I thought it was a problem until I saw the same line on my trinitron based
monitor here at work. I never noticed the top line on this bigger monitor until
it was pointed out here!
The lines are more visible with against a light or white background...
john
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5106.6 | :-) | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Mon Oct 07 1991 19:03 | 8 |
| Re: .*
I've been told that the Sony curse is that once you train your eyes to
see the shadow of the tension wire, you will never be able to ignore it
again.
I guess it is sort of like learning to spot the reel change marks on
movies.
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5106.7 | | RGB::ROSE | | Tue Oct 08 1991 09:56 | 9 |
| My eye goes straight to those wires every time I look at a VRT19.
The local neural processing in the eye picks out edges. I had my monitor
switched to a VR320. I seem to be in the minority on this. I had no trouble
whatsoever finding someone willing to switch his VR320 for my VRT19.
There are applications where this is totally unacceptable. We got a bug
report from a medical imaging company. They didn't like spurious lines in their
MR images. Any application where the fine detail contains important information
should not be using these monitors.
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5106.8 | reel sony | SUBWAY::LAFFORD | Llewellyn Lafford | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:05 | 6 |
| re: .6
Thanks. I was a professional projectionist for several years and now I can't
ignore the reel change marks on my Trinitron...
--Llew
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5106.9 | Tilted Display | VERGA::MACDONALD | Home of Digital Realtime Pubs | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:12 | 5 |
| My monitor's display is slightly tilted across the horizontal plane
- perhaps 1/8" higher on the right side than the left. What's the
procedure for correcting this skew? There is a large clamp around the
yoke with a rather large Philips head screw holding it tight. Is this
the clamp to loosen to adjust the tilt?
|
5106.10 | yes | STAR::GUINEAU | but what was the question? | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:20 | 4 |
| That's the YOKE, rotating it will rotate the picture on the display.
It has lots of voltage near it so be carefull!
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5106.11 | VERY Carefully! | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Fri Oct 11 1991 14:28 | 27 |
| Re .9:
> My monitor's display is slightly tilted across the horizontal plane
> - perhaps 1/8" higher on the right side than the left. What's the
> procedure for correcting this skew? There is a large clamp around the
> yoke with a rather large Philips head screw holding it tight. Is this
> the clamp to loosen to adjust the tilt?
Yes, BUT! Moving the yoke will affect the convergence. Some monitors
provide all the necessary convergence adjustments, but others don't.
Since you don't seem to have hit on a flock of adjustments to attempt
to fix the skew, I'd bet your monitor falls into the latter category.
If you just HAVE to try to fix the skew, I have a few suggestions.
1. Watch for high voltage (25KV) on the CRT! It won't kill you, but
it'll knock you on your can. A CRT can take DAYS to discharge.
2. Mark the EXACT location of the deflection yoke BEFORE you loosen
or move it. In particular, you want to make sure that it doesn't
move up or down the neck of the CRT, changing image size and
convergence.
3. Once you've made the image erect, figure out if you're better off
than you were before. Color purity could have been affected by the
move. So could both static and dynamic convergence. If things are
fine, you win; if not, try to get back to where you started.
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5106.12 | Purity | VERGA::MACDONALD | Home of Digital Realtime Pubs | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:01 | 5 |
|
I understand that convergence is adjusted through purity magnets
located on the neck and that those magnets are not associated with
loosening or tightening the clamp, or moving the yoke. That sound right
to you?
|
5106.13 | Not so simple | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ LTN1 | Fri Oct 11 1991 16:28 | 20 |
| Re .12:
> I understand that convergence is adjusted through purity magnets
> located on the neck and that those magnets are not associated with
> loosening or tightening the clamp, or moving the yoke. That sound right
> to you?
Not really. The purity magnets are usually separate from the
deflection yoke, but they are only the FIRST PART of the convergence
process (especially on three-gun CRTs). On a shadow-mask (three-gun)
CRT, the red gun must only "see" red phosphors (and likewise for the
green and blue guns). The color purity magnets provide a constant
deflection to the beam to make this the case. The rest of the
convergence process makes sure that the three spots converge on the
same trio of phosphors at the center (static convergence) and at the
edges (dynamic convergence) of the screen.
Newer systems DO take some shortcuts, especially with single-gun CRTs.
Simply stating that "convergence is adjusted through purity magnets"
seriously UNDERSTATES the process, though.
|
5106.14 | Sony Service Center | VERGA::MACDONALD | Home of Digital Realtime Pubs | Mon Oct 14 1991 13:12 | 3 |
| Well, while it's under warranty, I plan to drop it off at Westwood for
an alignment. Plus the convergence near the bottom of the screen
appears to be off.
|