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1998 SONY TRINITRON TV How was it Made – For Discussion,

1998 SONY TRINITRON TV How was it Made – For Discussion, Television Japan Electronics

#SONY #TRINITRON #Discussion

“Computer History Archives Project (“CHAP”)”

For discussion and comparision with how televisions are made today, we look at a vintage documentary of 1998 on SONY …

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33 Comments

  1. ( brazil ) I worked with maintenance on Sony TVs these years, and as it was heavy, and what only damaged it was the kinescope, the image tube, once I almost broke the column, on a 32-inch one, I had to pick up 3 people, which the crap they made in the past, no brand was that heavy!

  2. Que vuelvan esos televisores..hoy dia no sirven los nuevos tv..a los 3 años pantalla se daña..y aun conservo un trinitron de 27 de hace 5 años y lo compre usado..tienen al menos 30 años de fabricacion y aun funcionan..los modernos cada 3 años se dañan…

  3. The proccess to made products its a very AAA magnofacturing in ever extention of word 😢
    Ex sony trinitron experience to biggest who one plasm to now but evidentment dont weight in the past jijiji

  4. CRT bem bonitos off PASS perfeito gosto verdadeiro quero AV jogos RGB LUZ Limpar 👌 rápido TVS

    Futuro hoje pior LED HDR UHD LCD SDR feios pior não gosto fraco composite AV ou HDMI TVS Não gosto Ruin 👎jogos froca só

  5. All that research and machinery junked now all useless. Also the enormous amount of energy used to make and distribute the big heavy sets. (Mind Control Units)

  6. Also…I really wish that SONY would reintroduce the 'Sony Minidisk Recorder'! I currently have FIVE if these but could really do with a new one…Best machines EVER!

  7. It's super interesting to see this 1998 documentary and compare it against the one from Philips made at the end on the 70's (available on Youtube). In the Philips factory a huge chunk of the process was done manualy by the workers: the glass work, the assembly of the electron gun, it's positionning inside the tube, the welding of the whole assembly, the testing and QC, etc… . Whereas in this one almost every step was automated. I better understand now why color CRTs dropped in price over the years, it was a combination of both the electronic components being cheaper to make and because the manufacturers needed less and less human workers to build them. Interesting indeed 😄

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