MY COLLECTION OF CATHODE RAY AND PHOTO TUBES.
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Collectable CRT specifications and connections.
The Jewels of my collection of Cathode Ray Tubes.
IMAGE DISSECTOR CAMERA TUBE |
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Overall view of tube |
Business end |
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View of Accelerating Ring Assembly |
Socket |
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| Left: Accelerating Ring Assembly Center: Tube assembly Right: Multiplier section |
Internal Construction of an image dissector |
The Image Dissector |
| The image dissector is a camera tube occasionally employed in industrial television
systems. It is relatively insensitive, but it is useful where a scene is brilliantly
illuminated. To understand the operation of this tube, refer to internal construction
diagram above. The photocathode is similar to that of the image orthicon; it emits
electrons where light falls upon it. The combination of the focus coil and the focusing
electrodes (accelerating rings) causes these electrons to move away from the cathode Scanning currents, very much like those of other cameras, pass through the external deflection coils. In this case the entire electron image is deflected, rather than a narrow beam of electrons. The portion of the image which is deflected into the aperture produces the video at a given instant. Electrons emitted from the remaining portion of the tube are wasted, rather than stored on the target as in the image orthicon. The image dissector has no storage characteristic which acounts in part for its low sensitivity. The image dissector is useful only where scene illumination exceeds 200 foot-lamberts. A popular application is viewing the interior of a furnace |
The image dissector was invented by Philo Farnsworth in 1927.
My image dissector is a more modern version of his basic
invention.
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This is a Farnsworth Image Dissector. |
To learn more about this amazing man see:
A modern Image Dissector, ITT Vidissector F4012
(click images to view enlargement)
Some pages from the specifications.
Typical usage as slide-projector readers, hard-copy readers, electronically scanned spectrometers, and electronic star trackers.
ICONOSCOPE CAMERA TUBES |


Type 1847 Iconoscope
circa 1940
Sold for amateur and experimental use.

Sold for amateur and experimental use.
(click images to view enlargement)
One unusual thing about the 1847 is that there is no direct
connection between the mosaic and it's external signal connection.
Instead there is a ring of conductive material inside the tube,
connected to the mosaic, and a ring of conductive material outside the tube with a
signal connection. Thus the signal is picked up through this
"capacitor" consisting of two plates, internal and external, with the glass as a
dielectric.


A camera using the 1847 was described in the amateur radio magazine QST in May of 1940
The 1847 was later replaced by the type 5527
shown below.
RCA 1850A Image Iconoscope Camera Tube.
One of the earlist commercially available camera tubes.
circa 1950 (The earlier version, RCA 1850, dates back to 1939)
Selling price in 1948 was $540.00
(In 1948 you could buy a house for about $3000)

Later Versions, the 1850A were painted supposedly to reduce stray light from getting in.
What appears as white is actually a metalic deposit on the inside of the tube.
The Iconoscope was invented by Vladimir Zworykin (1889-1982) around 1929.

This image of Dr. Zworykin, made in 1933, is one of the earlist iconoscope television images.
shown by permission of
And a great site about early Television
RCA 1848 Iconoscope TV Camera Tube
circa 1940
Selling price in 1948 was $500.00
A similar tube, the 1846, was used in a television guided bomb during the latter part of WW2.
The 1846 and 1848 is considerably smaller than the 1850 as can be seen here.

A similar tube, the 1846, was used in a television guided bomb during
the latter part of WW2.
The 1848 can be positively identifed by an extra CAP not on the 1846 as shown above.
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The GB-4 |
GB-4 being dropped from a B-17 |
RCA Engineer showing 1846 iconoscope camera used in bomb. |
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Army officer piloting GB-4 to it's target |
Insides of the camera.
1846 |
Front view of camera with sketch of 1846 iconoscope tube it used. |
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Actual pictures of the 1846 Camera without lens. |
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For an excellent web site
detailing the history of the BLOCK project see http://www.qsl.net/w2vtm/mil_television_history.html |
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| Pictures of a mint conditon camera | ||
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Schematic of the camera Click image to enlarge then "save a copy" |
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Bet you thought this was a new idea during Desert Storm.
RCA 5527 image iconoscope
Selling price in 1948 was $47.50
Side View |
Business End |
circa 1947
Produced primarily as a low cost camera tube for Amateur and Experimental uses.
The circuit for the 1698 monoscope below could be used with the 5527 with minor modifications as the minimum complexity schematic.
The 5527 has 1/5 the output level and an additional video amplifier stage may be required.
This is a quite rare tube and, lucky me, I have acquired three of them.
MONOSCOPE TUBEs

1698 Charactron (Monoscope)
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Side View |
Business end with output connector | 14 pin Connector |
This tube was used to produce printing on television images. (The antique version of a character generator ROM used in computers). It contains a metal mask with characters etched through. The electron beam scans the mask. Where the mask has been etched with characters, the beam passes through to a collector plate. The electron current from the collector plate is a video signal of the character.
circa 1940
1698 Specifications
click to enlarge
The pattern is numbers and some special symbols.
1698 as a test pattern generator
click to enlarge
CK1414F10C Character generator monoscope |
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Click data sheet page to enlarge
Welcome to Kilokat's Antique Light Bulb Site
check out this old glass.
Vist the Early Television
Foundation Museum, tons of great picture, history, links.