F
Fred Abse
Guest
On Wed, 04 May 2005 22:45:53 +0200, Zak wrote:
effects.
--
"Electricity is of two kinds, positive and negative. The difference
is, I presume, that one comes a little more expensive, but is more
durable; the other is a cheaper thing, but the moths get into it."
(Stephen Leacock)
Some do, some don'tFred Abse wrote:
Vertical scan collapse, on a TV or computer monitor screen will burn it in
minutes. A stationary spot will do it in seconds. The old Schmitt system
back-projection TVs had circuitry to kill the EHT and bias the CRT hard
off in the event of a scan failure, since a stationary spot could melt the
glass.
Monitors have this as well.
Secondary emission due to electrode contamination can cause similarI think that aging CRTs fail from cathode exhaustion mostly. Th emission
spot inreases in size, and the image gets fuzzy as a result.
effects.
--
"Electricity is of two kinds, positive and negative. The difference
is, I presume, that one comes a little more expensive, but is more
durable; the other is a cheaper thing, but the moths get into it."
(Stephen Leacock)