News

“Cathode Ray Television,” reprinted by the Antique Valve Museum in all its Web 1.0 glory, originally appeared in the May 27, 1933 edition of Popular Wireless magazine, and was authored by one ...
If you or your company bought a cathode-ray tube (CRT) television or computer monitor between 1995 and 2007 you may qualify for a refund as part of a price-fixing settlement. The reimbursement is ...
The problem with standard cathode-ray-tube TV sets is that the larger the screen, the deeper the tube, which makes the back of a typical 32-inch model protrude like J. Lo in hip-huggers.
The new slim-tube TV's use a modified version of tube technology to reduce depth. To create an image with a cathode ray tube, a filament at the back narrow end of a vacuum tube is heated, which ...
Many Americans received their first taste of TV during the 1939 World's Fair in Queens, New York. But even before then, scientists and inventors were investigating ways that cathode ray tubes and ...
Before you throw out your old cathode-ray tube TV, you might consider the possibility that it’s worth something to the right person. A few weeks ago, I was thrift shopping with a friend when he ...
Cathode ray tubes, or CRTs, are made of heavy leaded glass, which is used to block harmful X-rays produced by the tube's cathode ray guns.
Posted in Hackaday Columns, Retrotechtacular, Slider Tagged cathode ray tube, crt, CRT TV, Retrotechtacluar, retrotechtactular ...