[geeks] "spinning wheel" [ Was: Re: Screw question ]
Robert J Slover
robert.j.slover at verizon.net
Fri Dec 16 03:45:34 CST 2005
On Thursday, December 12, 2005, at 09:59:34 AM, Bill Bradford
<mrbill at mrbill.net> wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 12, 2005 at 07:58:48AM -0500, Phil Stracchino wrote:
>> "spinning wheel"?
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dlp
>
> "In a projector with a single DMD chip, colors are produced by placing
> a
> color wheel between the lamp and the DMD where it is reflected out
> through
> ...
I find this vaguely humorous. I have a 1953 printing of Audels
Television Service
Manual. Chapter 12 is about projection television systems and covers a
number
of popular systems. Chapter 17 is on color television and focuses on
the two
systems that had at that point been developed and publicly
demonstrated. The
first method covered is CBS's "field sequential system", which employs
colored
rotating disks in front of both the camera and the receiver. The
following
chapter gives instruction on converting existing sets to color, and
contains a
rather comical (today) photo of a television with a huge motor and color
wheel assembly attached over the screen, doubling the physical size of
the TV
to support color. They even give a pattern for making your own color
disk,
and tell which color numbers from various brands of plastics to use.
There's a footnote explaining that CBS's method had already been
approved
by the FCC for use during certain hours in certain markets. The
competing
method, from RCA, is the "dot sequential method", a modified version of
which
became our current analog color television system. The book contains
very
detailed descriptions of how this system works, with block diagrams and
signal
examples, and the reasoning behind the design choices. The RCA method
was
cross-compatible with black and white television, a major advantage.
The CBS
method suffered from the difficulty of keeping a large spinning wheel
properly
synced at 1,440 rpm -- inertia and a stable power source being issues.
Besides
the humor in the rebirth of part of this idea 50 years later, I can see
the
solution to the big wheel problem already existed -- the projection
systems
all employed very small, very bright CRT's. A 5-7 inch tube was usual.
A 7 inch
tube would have only required a 15 1/2 inch wheel, solving at least the
physical
space issue.
[demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type multipart/appledouble]
--Robert
More information about the geeks
mailing list