As a retired So Cal radio spot writer, I admire your “appreciation” for descriptions that polish the turds so generously gifted to unwary consumers. I made my living doing that. And, as a radio/tv kludgemeister, since the age of ten (I'm 70 now) I enjoy your videos 100%. They need NO polishing.
I've been repairing consumer electronics for 30 years and rare is it to find a troubleshooter with methods like my own. I never worked on tube equipment and don't have any interest to but I could literally watch you troubleshoot a damn sewer pipe, oh wait!
Shango066 You are one fascinating dude, your commentary stylings are the BEST! The items you select to diagnose never fail to blow my mind. Hard to believe that it's even possible to resurrect ANY of these things! But of course the Mine Exploration is what brought me here... Top shelf content man. THANKS!
Heat that C.R.T. up and discharge a charged 20uf @450 volt cap between the heater and cathode a few times. It's either gonna fix it or phuck it. Thanks for the great educational troubleshooting video.
I love that brief brain failure Shango, I suffer from that too sometimes. Brilliant desert TV resurrect. Great CRT minus the fault. That FLIR camera is awesome.
This is the best demonstration of a picture tube with a heater-cathode short I have ever seen! I think the white insulating powder on the filaments is aluminum oxide. I have a bunch of old tv service books that talk about using 1:1 filament isolation transformers (they look identical to filament booster transformers) to remedy this problem, but apparently they never mentioned that it was not a complete fix. I wonder if it is possible to rewire the circuit to feed the video information to G1 rather than the cathode, as some sets did from the factory, to avoid shunting the video info to ground through the transformer. The thermal imaging cam will be an awesome diagnostic tool. Great video, as always, Shango066.
Validates the method of pounding on the top of the set to improve the picture. We had a Zenith “wildcat” which was about the same age and size. It was a trooper...a dim CRT did it in a few years ago
I remember reading one common trick for that problem was to use a turn or two on the core of the flyback to power the filament in the case of an H-K short. There'd be relatively little coupling since it's 15KHz and only a few turns vs. a 60Hz iron core transformer.
Shango, I’ve been watching your “resurrection” videos for quite some time now. Thanks for the diagnostic sagas, giving a final useful purpose for these farewell sets. There’s no way I would have ever learned so much about these old tube NTSC sets .. they are the “Simpson gear set automatic transmission” of the electronics world. A fascinating ingenious invention relatively unchanged, universally used, throughout the decades …
One idea (just for kicks and giggles if you don't care about blowing it up) - hook up BOTH heater pins (in parallel) to one side of a car battery, then the cathode to the other, then tap the CRT. I'm not sure if 12v will blow the filament open, but quite close. The amperage will absolutely fry whatever's shorting it though. If the heater is loose and is touching the outside can itself it will melt it. :)
Thanks for the videos. Beats anything else on TV. Back when I used to work on these things, I used a 1000x attenuation HV probe to measure voltage on horizontal output plate, etc. It acts like a low pass filter for those pulses so it won't damage the meter. ALSO, I used to play with infrared photo film and noticed that the optical and infrared images were displaced like your device. I think it is difficult or impossible to color correct lenses for that large difference in wavelength of light.
Hey Shangoo, this TV is a rare one. I tried finding even just a photo of this exact set that would have all the knobs on to see what type of knobs these sets had. So far I couldn't find an exact photo of the set. You mentioned in another video that all of these set you received/picked up; had no knobs on the front. Either the knobs melted from the heat; fell off and got buried in the ground; or someone snatched the knobs off to leave the sets rot away. I hate when vintage electronics like this get abandoned and abused.
Repair shop owner would get mad if we took these in for estimates back in the 80's. Started to charge $20 .00 for estimates. They were considered junk then. excellent repair and video as usual.
Sometimes when I watch your videos, I think, "Yeah, I get it, and I would have followed the same path. " Not this time. I would not have had a clue. NICE JOB!
Amazing! You keep coming up with um. What a great lesson to illustrate the value of voltage checks. I haven't even finished the video and had to comment! You are really something. Someone mentioned the flyback wrap trick. Would really be interesting to see if that works.
Makes perfect sense. Notice that the horizontal lines as well as the very top and bottom of circle are unaffected by the short. Those are low frequencies, while the sides of the circle are high frequencies. The high frequency portions of the video are being shorted to ground via the inter-winding capacitance of your isolation transformer when the cathode and heater are in contact, while the low frequencies are unaffected. If you used a multiburst pattern, you would really see the frequency-dependent effect of the short.
You just got to want to shake this guy's hand, 10 out of 10 for effort mate. Yep, many years ago Ive tapped a few tubes, but was never exactly sure why :-) Something very deep in the dark recesses of my mind, did we used to wrap half a dozen turns of well insulated wire on the LOPT and use this to heat the tube? All been a long time ago now, but Shango's videos have to be the best on TH-cam. Keep the faith mate.
I would have tried the Clear Shorts button on your CRT tester. As a kid in the 1980s, I built a short killer from a schematic in a 1960s Popular Electronics magazine. I seem to remember it used something like a 10uF 450V capacitor and would dump that capacitor across the shorted elements on the tube. I only needed to use it once, I remember the bright flash from inside the neck of the tube.... and guess what, the tube worked again! Your mileage might vary... LOL. Especially with an H-K short where it's probably a crack in the ceramic coating on the filament. But hey, the CRT is useless otherwise, so it can't hurt to try something like that. I have heard of people getting color tubes with one heater open to work using similar tricks. The arc from the high voltage applied by the capacitor is supposed to weld the broken filament together, and the fact it's a brief pulse of high voltage doesn't allow the heaters time to overheat and be damaged. Again, last resort stuff, and not something I would trust as a permanent repair for a paying customer. Alternatively, you could buy a vacuum pump and take up glassblowing as a hobby. LOL.
You should be able to isolate the added filament transformer from the video signal with a pair of chokes, one choke in each wire going to the fil. Transformer secondary. Maybe even two chokes in each leg, one rf choke and one for lower frequencies put in series.
A. Dog Yes. If he has one on hand. That 6.3v fil xfrmr is going to have huge capacitance between pri and sec windings. Either way should make a huge difference.
MrJohhhnnnyyy Problem with using a single high value choke is that it may have too low a self resonant frequency. Way around it is to use two in series. First blocks the high freqs and hopefully has a high enough SRF that it acts like an inductor at the highest video frequency present. Then the higher value choke in series takes care of the lower freq components in the video signal. May have to experiment with actual values a bit to get it right. Yes I agree must do chokes in both fil leads to have any effect.
I personally don't think shango066 is a fake he's attempting to do a lot of things that a lot of other people out there wouldn't even attempt to think about doing I think his videos are very educational I stand behind him watching him 100%
The vu-brite brightener came from an area close to my childhood home. I lived in the 60645 area code, and the one on the brightener was 60646. Small world.
One trick I used to use with heater cathode shorts in CRTs was to wind a couple of turns of wire round the flyback Transformer’s core to supply the tube heater. That way there is much less capacitive drag on the video signal.
I'll bet that set was left not long after new. With emissions like that it's got to be low hours. The storage conditions over time is most likely the cause of the short.
Maybe, but it wouldn't be atmospheric conditions---the working parts are sealed in a vacuum. Now if the set was dropped or subject to an impact, that could loosen or shift some of the elements....
Try turn TV up side down temporary. Gravity will pull down the filament .Short could go away. If helps , then you can flip the CRT. I had fixed many TVs that way.
The CRT H-K short can sometimes be removed... Heat up the filament, charge a 100uF capacitor with a diode on the power line. Dump the capacitor across the heater and the cathode terminals - the capacitor might blow away the short, you're unlikely to fry the filament(s) unless you go crazy on the capacitor. I got a 1965 Onkyo color portable to work that way, series-string, one gun's cathode shorted to filament. If an isolation transformer isn't practical, you have nothing else to lose. This is similar to how the short-clearing modes on some CRT tester work, but it's one button that could doom the CRT if a tech accidentally hit it in the field, so H-K short requires a little more finesse. If it's a parallel set, the smallest 1:1 60Hz transformer you can find should be okay to isolate the filament. Bigger transformer = more stray capacitance = more rolloff of the high-frequency picture info = more smeared picture. Parallel sets don't fail the same way with an H-K short in the CRT, but the image still gets smeary because the entire filament circuit is now part of the video output. The capacitor trick might work, but I would never use it as anything but a last resort before having the CRT rebuilt (if the set is worth it). If you still have that RCA, it would be a perfect candidate to try it.
I’m curious if the CRT was taken out of the set turned 180 degrees and retested would the cathode to Filament short show itself? That would depend on how the degraded the insulating material on the filament is, because the shirt was so intermittent I think that it wouldn’t short if the CRT was installed upside down
Up in Des Moines Iowa there was a guy who would recondition old picture tubes, basically rebuild them, he'd recoat the screens and install a new gun assembly. Sadly, he closed up his shop a few years ago due to crt and picture tubes being obsolete.
This vintage TV brings back my early teens. I would take the tubes my Dad taught me that were important to test, or the usual suspect. I was testing the tubes at a RadioShack. The guy behind the counter asked me how do you know how to test these tubes? I said my Dad taught me. Dad also taught me how to drink. Jk
I have a little 2005 Toshiba dvd tube tv combo it has great picture a friend got it for me on the side of the road and it came with the original remote
Great video and funny comments. But aren’t there old sets like this, here and there, enough so that rescuing one that was in the mud isn’t necessary? Sure maybe it can be made to work again, but the outside is spoiled.
Gosh!! We sooo needed that big arrow in the thumbnail to know this would be a video about a television. What is it with this "fad" with arrows on TH-cam thumbnails lately???
When you have an arrow, or a circle or a little pointer finger, anything pointing to some part of a picture in the thumbnail, people will check in just to see what the thumbnail is trying to draw attention to.
The easy fix for a heater cathode short is 3 turns of double insulted wire (2V/turn) around the horizontal o/p transformer ferrite core to supply the filament & it won't show any symptoms of the short, eg video quality degradation, I did this with many hundreds of TV's back in the day.
Yes, as 'kevtris' said, heating it from the flyback will solve it, I've done that before. And I've installed a bad EF80 (6BX6) tube in the heater string as a 'dummy heater' to prevent the other tubes being overheated. Then the RMS voltage of the CRT heater also should be tweaked with a series resistor (or with a variable inductor, it's more convenient to tweak, and causes less additional load to the flyback), it needs a DSO with RMS measurement for the most accurate results. An old light bulb RMS converter will also do it, if it has high enough input resistance. I haven't seen any true RMS multimeters which will do that (altough I've tried only two different lower-end models), they either not liking the 15kHz and/or the high crest factor.
Hey do you still have the manual for this one? I have one of these in great condition, great picture quality and sound, BUT the image seems to be titled upward, there’s just an empty black bar at the bottom of the screen and no adjustments at the knobs on the back seem to be helping.
Ohh, that thumbnail... If it weren't for that I'd have clicked on a pop video instead... ;) Can't wait to get into this vid and see the dark platinum mist & dead birds I'm promised by the comments section...
Will a brightener (or can you try a 1:1 isolation xfmr) isolate the filament from ground? Well you later said, and did an isolation solution .. and probably will add choke/RF isolation at the filament leads …
There should be a setting on your FLIR camera software to adjust your distance from whatever you're looking at. That should help correct the alignment of the two images.
How about adding a couple of chokes in series with the heater pins? They should keep the high frequency video signal away from the filament transformer and its capacitance.
Greetings: [yes, I know these are very late suggestions, but its the thought that counts.) Idea 1: placing an RF choke (must be able to carry the heater current) on each heater lead close to the CRT. I like your method with sep 6.3 vac x'former best! Shorted also seems to lose/ hide interlace display.
Could you filter out the video information on the filament transformer using a passive crossover as one would do in the audio world? Limiting 55 to 65 Hz should do it.
Hm I don't have any experience with tube type TVs, but just thinking: Maybe you can rectify the AC (and drop it back down to 6,3V) of your extra heating transformer for the picture tube. That way the picture information (which I assume is more AC-like) and the heating voltage (now DC) are more different and possible interfere less? Anyway another very interesting video! :)
There's still a capacitive path for the video signal to the transformer. Not worth the hassle, since you can run the heater from the flyback with no problems, and it doesn't need an additional transformer, just some turns on the ferrite core with insulated wire. Rectifying and filtering the signal from the flyback is a good idea though, if you don't have the gear to measure the RMS value of the 15kHz signal accurately.
It's interesting to me that you decided to do a clickbait thumbnail for your video, like I tend to see for some "urban exploration" videos, but after hearing 0:25, I now understand why.
Love the street style diagnosis and repair. We need more of this kind of thinking today.
As a retired So Cal radio spot writer, I admire your “appreciation” for descriptions that polish the turds so generously gifted to unwary consumers. I made my living doing that.
And, as a radio/tv kludgemeister, since the age of ten (I'm 70 now) I enjoy your videos 100%. They need NO polishing.
I've been repairing consumer electronics for 30 years and rare is it to find a troubleshooter with methods like my own. I never worked on tube equipment and don't have any interest to but I could literally watch you troubleshoot a damn sewer pipe, oh wait!
Shango066 You are one fascinating dude, your commentary stylings are the BEST! The items you select to diagnose never fail to blow my mind. Hard to believe that it's even possible to resurrect ANY of these things! But of course the Mine Exploration is what brought me here... Top shelf content man. THANKS!
Really love these video's how old TV's are brought back to live Snago has a true talent
Thanks for the old house tour. Too bad it's gone now.
Shango your cynicism is getting richer...I love it LoL
Your diagnosing skills are amazing. Thanks for the cool video!
Awesome!!
Nothing like Shango066 to brighten up a Monday...
Heat that C.R.T. up and discharge a charged 20uf @450 volt cap between the heater and cathode a few times. It's either gonna fix it or phuck it. Thanks for the great educational troubleshooting video.
Love me some shango066 in the morning.
smells like tvs
Im saving this for bed^^
iamdarkyoshi - Same...Watched this for breakfast this morning.
I love that brief brain failure Shango, I suffer from that too sometimes. Brilliant desert TV resurrect. Great CRT minus the fault. That FLIR camera is awesome.
Just found your channel, nice! I still use my '64 B/W RCA almost every day. Mine was buried half in a shed, recapped, and it lives on!
Shango...Watching your videos, is like watching a "Who -Done- It" suspense movie. Keep them coming!
Now you're only missing the viral title: "You WON'T BELIEVE this old TV problem and how it was fixed!!"
"This man resurrected TVs for years, here's what happened to his brain"
How about TV resurrection GONE WRONG!!!!! Or, the cops don't want you to know how to fix this TV...
tv repair prank in the hood [gone sexual]
Secret that evil tv companies dont want you to know
Nice bird EOL video. Ant's having a good day of it...
I came here by chance, and I subbed to your channel almost immediately. I really like your videos!
Vintage PCB layout is so interesting. You’d never see a board laid out like that manufactured in the modern age lol
This is the best demonstration of a picture tube with a heater-cathode short I have ever seen! I think the white insulating powder on the filaments is aluminum oxide. I have a bunch of old tv service books that talk about using 1:1 filament isolation transformers (they look identical to filament booster transformers) to remedy this problem, but apparently they never mentioned that it was not a complete fix. I wonder if it is possible to rewire the circuit to feed the video information to G1 rather than the cathode, as some sets did from the factory, to avoid shunting the video info to ground through the transformer. The thermal imaging cam will be an awesome diagnostic tool. Great video, as always, Shango066.
Validates the method of pounding on the top of the set to improve the picture.
We had a Zenith “wildcat” which was about the same age and size. It was a trooper...a dim CRT did it in a few years ago
Next video: diagnosis and resurrection of that bird?
Maybe he could use the high voltage coming off of the flyback of that RCA to jump-start the bird's heart
As justsomeguytoyou said: He'd need to use the flyback transformer
Maybe a bulk re-cap to restore the bird to full working order.
"That parrot's not dead, 'es just sleeping!"
Zirok1982
Looked more like a bat to me.
I remember reading one common trick for that problem was to use a turn or two on the core of the flyback to power the filament in the case of an H-K short. There'd be relatively little coupling since it's 15KHz and only a few turns vs. a 60Hz iron core transformer.
hmmm didnt think of that. Not sure this flyback would like any extra load
Oh yea, used that trick once on a zenith, same short, same blurry ass picture symptom, set was solid state though.
kevtris That's how the HV rect tubes get their filament lit. 👍
shango066 The creativity of your solution totally had me! 😉
"Dark Platinum Mist"...I think I saw that video on the internet once.
sup brad no good info 4 SPF?
Quite classy as well.
Shango, I’ve been watching your “resurrection” videos for quite some time now. Thanks for the diagnostic sagas, giving a final useful purpose for these farewell sets. There’s no way I would have ever learned so much about these old tube NTSC sets .. they are the “Simpson gear set automatic transmission” of the electronics world. A fascinating ingenious invention relatively unchanged, universally used, throughout the decades …
I didn't like your cynical comments when I started watching your channel, but now I'm hooked.
One idea (just for kicks and giggles if you don't care about blowing it up) - hook up BOTH heater pins (in parallel) to one side of a car battery, then the cathode to the other, then tap the CRT. I'm not sure if 12v will blow the filament open, but quite close. The amperage will absolutely fry whatever's shorting it though. If the heater is loose and is touching the outside can itself it will melt it. :)
Love your videos , keep up the good work
Nice trendy thumbnail
Thanks for the videos. Beats anything else on TV. Back when I used to work on these things, I used a 1000x attenuation HV probe to measure voltage on horizontal output plate, etc. It acts like a low pass filter for those pulses so it won't damage the meter. ALSO, I used to play with infrared photo film and noticed that the optical and infrared images were displaced like your device. I think it is difficult or impossible to color correct lenses for that large difference in wavelength of light.
Hey Shangoo, this TV is a rare one. I tried finding even just a photo of this exact set that would have all the knobs on to see what type of knobs these sets had. So far I couldn't find an exact photo of the set. You mentioned in another video that all of these set you received/picked up; had no knobs on the front. Either the knobs melted from the heat; fell off and got buried in the ground; or someone snatched the knobs off to leave the sets rot away. I hate when vintage electronics like this get abandoned and abused.
cannot get enough of you fixing crusty sets!
Repair shop owner would get mad if we took these in for estimates back in the 80's. Started to charge $20 .00 for estimates. They were considered junk then.
excellent repair and video as usual.
The bird has poor cathode emission and needs recapped and brought up on a variac and dim bulb tester.
Shango , aside from the repair part, which is marvelous..you always entertain me with your comments...: )
Awesome video...really like your style of problem solving!
I can't believe you got that damn tube to work like that.... LOL
You are the man! 🍻 Drink a beer! Cheers to you! -Al
Sometimes when I watch your videos, I think, "Yeah, I get it, and I would have followed the same path. " Not this time. I would not have had a clue. NICE JOB!
Worth the trouble to get going to view such quality deprogramming. A short is a short of course when the short of course is a Mr. Blur.
Glad your back.
Amazing! You keep coming up with um. What a great lesson to illustrate the value of voltage checks. I haven't even finished the video and had to comment! You are really something. Someone mentioned the flyback wrap trick. Would really be interesting to see if that works.
It should be called “musty basement wood paneling with communist bloc grey”.
RCA the quality did not go in before the name went onnnn
Nice thumbnail
"It's time for Scotty Kilmer DOT COM"
MattExzy not sure what Eric O. Would have to say about that ;)
Mist means manure in German
lol tv ich mist :v
Makes perfect sense. Notice that the horizontal lines as well as the very top and bottom of circle are unaffected by the short. Those are low frequencies, while the sides of the circle are high frequencies. The high frequency portions of the video are being shorted to ground via the inter-winding capacitance of your isolation transformer when the cathode and heater are in contact, while the low frequencies are unaffected. If you used a multiburst pattern, you would really see the frequency-dependent effect of the short.
You just got to want to shake this guy's hand, 10 out of 10 for effort mate. Yep, many years ago Ive tapped a few tubes, but was never exactly sure why :-) Something very deep in the dark recesses of my mind, did we used to wrap half a dozen turns of well insulated wire on the LOPT and use this to heat the tube? All been a long time ago now, but Shango's videos have to be the best on TH-cam. Keep the faith mate.
I would have tried the Clear Shorts button on your CRT tester. As a kid in the 1980s, I built a short killer from a schematic in a 1960s Popular Electronics magazine. I seem to remember it used something like a 10uF 450V capacitor and would dump that capacitor across the shorted elements on the tube. I only needed to use it once, I remember the bright flash from inside the neck of the tube.... and guess what, the tube worked again! Your mileage might vary... LOL. Especially with an H-K short where it's probably a crack in the ceramic coating on the filament. But hey, the CRT is useless otherwise, so it can't hurt to try something like that.
I have heard of people getting color tubes with one heater open to work using similar tricks. The arc from the high voltage applied by the capacitor is supposed to weld the broken filament together, and the fact it's a brief pulse of high voltage doesn't allow the heaters time to overheat and be damaged. Again, last resort stuff, and not something I would trust as a permanent repair for a paying customer.
Alternatively, you could buy a vacuum pump and take up glassblowing as a hobby. LOL.
Wonderful solution.
You should be able to isolate the added filament transformer from the video signal with a pair of chokes, one choke in each wire going to the fil. Transformer secondary. Maybe even two chokes in each leg, one rf choke and one for lower frequencies put in series.
I wonder what value
shango066 I'd start with 47 uH or so. Maybe add in series a 1 mH for the low frequencies. One pair in each filament leg going to the CRT.
A. Dog Yes. If he has one on hand. That 6.3v fil xfrmr is going to have huge capacitance between pri and sec windings. Either way should make a huge difference.
Herbert Susmann Damn, I wanted to say that, but you got here earlier :D I would've used 470 or more microhenry, it must be in each leg.
MrJohhhnnnyyy Problem with using a single high value choke is that it may have too low a self resonant frequency. Way around it is to use two in series. First blocks the high freqs and hopefully has a high enough SRF that it acts like an inductor at the highest video frequency present. Then the higher value choke in series takes care of the lower freq components in the video signal. May have to experiment with actual values a bit to get it right. Yes I agree must do chokes in both fil leads to have any effect.
That FLIR camera is awesome.
I personally don't think shango066 is a fake he's attempting to do a lot of things that a lot of other people out there wouldn't even attempt to think about doing I think his videos are very educational I stand behind him watching him 100%
The vu-brite brightener came from an area close to my childhood home. I lived in the 60645 area code, and the one on the brightener was 60646. Small world.
One with the nature 👍
One trick I used to use with heater cathode shorts in CRTs was to wind a couple of turns of wire round the flyback Transformer’s core to supply the tube heater. That way there is much less capacitive drag on the video signal.
I'll bet that set was left not long after new. With emissions like that it's got to be low hours. The storage conditions over time is most likely the cause of the short.
Maybe, but it wouldn't be atmospheric conditions---the working parts are sealed in a vacuum. Now if the set was dropped or subject to an impact, that could loosen or shift some of the elements....
I don't think that it's caused by storage conditions. CRT inside is evacuated, so outside conditions have a little impact.
The short occurred while the set was relatively new, perhaps?
when you panned over to the bird I lol'd
Great video
When I was a kid we had a tv do something like this , we would rap the tv and it worked for a few days, then pop it again
Try turn TV up side down temporary. Gravity will pull down the filament .Short could go away. If helps , then you can flip the CRT. I had fixed many TVs that way.
I just bought a 1953 RCA AA5 radio.RCA called it the "Glendon".
I like Shango. I wonder which side of him is the most outspoken, his tech side or the stand up comedian. Greetings from Belgium.
Yes. Enjoyable sarcastic yet calling out idiocy. Definitely awesome.
The CRT H-K short can sometimes be removed... Heat up the filament, charge a 100uF capacitor with a diode on the power line. Dump the capacitor across the heater and the cathode terminals - the capacitor might blow away the short, you're unlikely to fry the filament(s) unless you go crazy on the capacitor. I got a 1965 Onkyo color portable to work that way, series-string, one gun's cathode shorted to filament. If an isolation transformer isn't practical, you have nothing else to lose. This is similar to how the short-clearing modes on some CRT tester work, but it's one button that could doom the CRT if a tech accidentally hit it in the field, so H-K short requires a little more finesse.
If it's a parallel set, the smallest 1:1 60Hz transformer you can find should be okay to isolate the filament. Bigger transformer = more stray capacitance = more rolloff of the high-frequency picture info = more smeared picture. Parallel sets don't fail the same way with an H-K short in the CRT, but the image still gets smeary because the entire filament circuit is now part of the video output.
The capacitor trick might work, but I would never use it as anything but a last resort before having the CRT rebuilt (if the set is worth it). If you still have that RCA, it would be a perfect candidate to try it.
Thanks for sharing!
I’m curious if the CRT was taken out of the set turned 180 degrees and retested would the cathode to Filament short show itself? That would depend on how the degraded the insulating material on the filament is, because the shirt was so intermittent I think that it wouldn’t short if the CRT was installed upside down
It's working without a total recap!!!
Up in Des Moines Iowa there was a guy who would recondition old picture tubes, basically rebuild them, he'd recoat the screens and install a new gun assembly. Sadly, he closed up his shop a few years ago due to crt and picture tubes being obsolete.
This vintage TV brings back my early teens. I would take the tubes my Dad taught me that were important to test, or the usual suspect. I was testing the tubes at a RadioShack. The guy behind the counter asked me how do you know how to test these tubes? I said my Dad taught me. Dad also taught me how to drink. Jk
Very interesting.....I've never seen a crt short demonstrated before. Too bad the crt tester won't fix h-k shorts, that is one bright tube
I have a little 2005 Toshiba dvd tube tv combo it has great picture a friend got it for me on the side of the road and it came with the original remote
Great video and funny comments. But aren’t there old sets like this, here and there, enough so that rescuing one that was in the mud isn’t necessary? Sure maybe it can be made to work again, but the outside is spoiled.
Watching the 1/2/2021~ 1965 TV Resurrection part two AnD tHe CoMmEnTs are switched off! WhYeeeeee? We love this part.
6:40 Those petrified cob webs are something else! 😂
The channel that prevents me for deleting my account.
you can watch it without a youtube account, just wont be able to like, comment, or sub
3:25 The ciiiiiiiiircle of life!
I only use fully isolated Shango-tron picture tubes in my television because I’m a real man.
Gosh!! We sooo needed that big arrow in the thumbnail to know this would be a video about a television.
What is it with this "fad" with arrows on TH-cam thumbnails lately???
When you have an arrow, or a circle or a little pointer finger, anything pointing to some part of a picture in the thumbnail, people will check in just to see what the thumbnail is trying to draw attention to.
2:55 - 3:11 - Please bring out a collection of your finest brain failures and descriptions of schwertern-ferglers! :)
The easy fix for a heater cathode short is 3 turns of double insulted wire (2V/turn) around the horizontal o/p transformer ferrite core to supply the filament & it won't show any symptoms of the short, eg video quality degradation, I did this with many hundreds of TV's back in the day.
Yes, as 'kevtris' said, heating it from the flyback will solve it, I've done that before. And I've installed a bad EF80 (6BX6) tube in the heater string as a 'dummy heater' to prevent the other tubes being overheated. Then the RMS voltage of the CRT heater also should be tweaked with a series resistor (or with a variable inductor, it's more convenient to tweak, and causes less additional load to the flyback), it needs a DSO with RMS measurement for the most accurate results.
An old light bulb RMS converter will also do it, if it has high enough input resistance. I haven't seen any true RMS multimeters which will do that (altough I've tried only two different lower-end models), they either not liking the 15kHz and/or the high crest factor.
Good job
It would be nice to find an old medium-wave cryocooled IR camera, but even ones from the early '90s seem to be insanely expensive used.
Hey do you still have the manual for this one? I have one of these in great condition, great picture quality and sound, BUT the image seems to be titled upward, there’s just an empty black bar at the bottom of the screen and no adjustments at the knobs on the back seem to be helping.
Perfekly Diagnostik in old TV.
i want that tv so much
You could put a pair of inductors between the filament transformer & the heater to prevent the video loading effect.
You should include the original sales price of these units and how much they’re worth today
Ohh, that thumbnail... If it weren't for that I'd have clicked on a pop video instead... ;) Can't wait to get into this vid and see the dark platinum mist & dead birds I'm promised by the comments section...
Will a brightener (or can you try a 1:1 isolation xfmr) isolate the filament from ground? Well you later said, and did an isolation solution .. and probably will add choke/RF isolation at the filament leads …
At least now you can watch all the old programs.
There should be a setting on your FLIR camera software to adjust your distance from whatever you're looking at. That should help correct the alignment of the two images.
Awesome!
RCA is similar to Panasonic.😊
How about adding a couple of chokes in series with the heater pins? They should keep the high frequency video signal away from the filament transformer and its capacitance.
One thing you could do is feed the filament though a couple of coils to choke off the video signal from getting back to the filament transformer.
Greetings: [yes, I know these are very late suggestions, but its the thought that counts.)
Idea 1: placing an RF choke (must be able to carry the heater current) on each heater lead close to the CRT.
I like your method with sep 6.3 vac x'former best!
Shorted also seems to lose/ hide interlace display.
Greetings:
Might ask FLIR mfr'r if the offset is adjustable or fixable.
Could you filter out the video information on the filament transformer using a passive crossover as one would do in the audio world? Limiting 55 to 65 Hz should do it.
Dark platinum mist
Hmm. 😕
Dark platinum mist for the win!
Hm I don't have any experience with tube type TVs, but just thinking: Maybe you can rectify the AC (and drop it back down to 6,3V) of your extra heating transformer for the picture tube. That way the picture information (which I assume is more AC-like) and the heating voltage (now DC) are more different and possible interfere less? Anyway another very interesting video! :)
There's still a capacitive path for the video signal to the transformer. Not worth the hassle, since you can run the heater from the flyback with no problems, and it doesn't need an additional transformer, just some turns on the ferrite core with insulated wire. Rectifying and filtering the signal from the flyback is a good idea though, if you don't have the gear to measure the RMS value of the 15kHz signal accurately.
It's interesting to me that you decided to do a clickbait thumbnail for your video, like I tend to see for some "urban exploration" videos, but after hearing 0:25, I now understand why.