What
Kind of Television?To the television set owner the most
important thing is the kind of picture he is going to have to look at. Today’s
picture is made up of 525 lines and appears on a screen generally measuring not
more than 9 x 12 inches. To get a better idea of what this means, imagine a sheet
of paper the size of the present television screen. Streams of electrons “paint”
a picture on it in varying shades of light and dark. The painting is done one
line at a time, in much the same way that a page is typed on a typewriter. A
complete new picture—like a new page of 525 lines, each line a fraction
of an inch lower than the preceding one—is painted 30 times a second. When
the 525th line is completed at the bottom of the screen, a new picture is. instantaneously
started at the top of the screen. With 30 new pictures every second the viewer
gets the same effect of motion as he would get by running 30 frames of movie film
through a projector every second. To get some idea of how fast television
pictures are painted, we can recall that the average typewritten page, single-spaced,
has 2,000 characters including letters and punctuation marks, but not including
spaces. One television picture has 260,000 characters, equal to about 130 pages
of typewriting. The Bible contains 3,500,000 letters and punctuation marks.
Television transmits that number of characters in half a second. If science
is able to perfect the transmission of television pictures at high frequencies,
more lines can be put on the screen. A 1,000-line picture would contain 585,000
characters and presumably be twice as good. In order to produce a 1,000-line picture,
it will be necessary to alter completely the 525-line system. This means that
in the event of a switch-over all receivers manufactured for 525-line television
will become obsolete. As a result of the FCC’s allocation proposals,
manufacturers will go ahead after the war and produce sets for receiving the 525-line
picture, and some, if not all, broadcasters will send out programs that can be
picked up by these sets. War improvements cut costsFacilities
for manufacturing electronic devices for wartime use will be available when peace
comes for the production, of television receivers and equipment. This will bring
down the price you will have to pay for your television set. For example, the
prewar cathode-ray tube, the electronic tube that takes electrons and makes them
paint a picture before your eyes, costs about $60. After the war this tube will
cost only $20. According to manufacturers, the first television sets will
cost anywhere from $75 for table models to $600 for deluxe television-phonograph-radio
combinations. The cost of a television receiver depends largely on the size of
the picture, since the larger the picture, the more tubes and gadgets are needed.
Prewar sets with a 9 x 12-inch picture had about 27 tubes for television reception
only. After the war, it is expected that sets will show 18 x 24-inch pictures,
large enough to be viewed comfortably in the average living room. Systems
of mirrors and lenses are now being developed to project on a screen television
pictures picked up from the receiving tube. One such system consists of a spherical
front mirror and an aspherical lens. The mirror looks like a shallow bowl; the
lens is flat on one side, and the opposite side has a special surface contour.
The mirror arrangement follows the principle of the reflecting telescope, used
by astronomers for many years. The projection system in the illustration
on page 39 is mounted near the bottom of the receiver cabinet and it projects
the image straight up onto a flat mirror inclined at 45 degrees. The mirror throws
the image onto the screen or onto a translucent plate of glass built into the
front of the cabinet. This arrangement presents the advantages of compactness,
and the cabinet need not be much larger than the present floor-model radio console.
Prewar television pictures had a disagreeable greenish cast, caused by
the fluorescent screen of the cathode-ray tube. Wartime research has created a
new kind of fluorescent screen that gives a black and white picture almost as
good as a newspaper half-tone. The flat cathode-ray tube, used in 1941,
made it necessary for the spectator to stand directly in front of the screen in
order to see an undistorted picture. A new rounded tube has been developed during
this war that throws the picture on a curved surface. This new tube gives a clearer
picture that may be viewed from many comfortable angles. Look
before you buy
Unless you live 50 miles or less from New York, Chicago,
Washington, Philadelphia, Schenectady, or Hollywood, you cannot, at the present
moment, receive pictures on a television set. So don’t rush out and buy
one right away or order one from a mail-order house as soon as they are available.
First you had better make sure that you are within the transmitting area of a
television station. During wartime there are six commercial and three experimental
television stations broadcasting regular programs and covering an area in which
about 27,000,000 people live. Plans are under way for at least one national television
network linking the major centers of population throughout the country. This network
is not expected to be in operation before 1950, however. Radio waves at
television frequencies act somewhat like a powerful searchlight. Most picture-carrying
waves will not follow the curve of the earth’s surface, nor will they go
through a hill or even a building, like the radio waves which now carry sounds.
Therefore, the service area of a single television transmitter is limited. The
quality of the picture reproduced on your set depends upon there being no intervening
obstacles between it and the transmitter. It is desirable, therefore, to have
both the sending and receiving antennas as high up in the air as is conveniently
possible. From a transmitter atop the Empire State Building it is possible
at present to send pictures a distance of about 50 miles. Of course there are
places not 5 miles from this transmitter where no pictures can be received or
where reception is very poor because there are obstacles between the transmitting
and receiving antennas. Network possibilitiesBecause of the very
high frequencies involved, television programs cannot be transmitted by wire.
This means that we cannot have a national network of television stations linked
together by ordinary telephone wires as radio stations are. A solution to this
problem may be found in the coaxial cable, a special wire that can carry high
television frequencies. However, these cables are expensive. One well-known radio
man estimated that a cable connecting New York and Los Angeles would cost nearly
half a billion dollars. Plans are under way, nevertheless, for developing such
a network. Another possible solution to the problem of developing a television
network may be a system of relay stations. Under this system, a program sent out
by one station is picked up by another station 50 miles away. The second station
re-broadcasts the program to a third station, which in turn rebroadcasts it to
a fourth station, and so on. There is every likelihood that by using the
coaxial cable or the relay system, or a combination of the two, we will one day
have a national television network. Today the television signal likes to stay
near home, but science will find ways to make it venture out and eventually cover
the world. All this boils down to the fact that if you live in a smaller
town, you’ll probably have to wait until a television station is set up
nearby or until your town is made a link in a television network. If you live
in a big city, you may start shopping for a set as soon as they come on the market.
Buy wiselyBuying a television set is going to be like making an
investment in a washing machine or an automobile. It will set you back from $100
up, and you’ll want to be sure of getting your money’s worth. Before
you start looking for a receiver, check up on the television station in your area
and find out whether its programs interest you. What’s the use of buying
a television set if the only programs you can get are ones you don’t like?
The first time you see a television picture, your enthusiasm for the novelty of
it will probably cause you to believe it a little better than it actually is.
Don’t let the salesman double talk you into buying one before it is demonstrated
in your home. Who knows, you may be living in a “dead spot” where
it is not possible to pick up television pictures. Before you buy, sit down and
watch television programs in your own home for at least one hour. Decide for yourself
whether you think the picture is good enough and get some notion of exactly how
much eyestrain is involved. You should also find out how long it is likely
to be before the set you are going to buy will become obsolete. It is not likely
that reputable television set manufacturers, like those mentioned earlier, will
risk public good will by offering for sale sets that may be obsolete in anything
less than two years. Color televisionWe haven’t talked about
color television up to now because, although the authorities don’t agree,
color television seems a long way off. Color television is to black and white
television what technicolor is to ordinary motion pictures. It is still in the
research laboratory, but one day the complex problems will be solved and you’ll
be able to see telecasts in natural colors. In the meantime, black and white television
will be the order of the day. A number of methods of transmitting pictures
in natural color have been demonstrated. The most recent method makes use of a
whirling transparent disc in the television camera in the studio and a similar
disc in the receiver at home. Both discs are divided into three segments,
one tinted red, another yellow, and the third blue. In operation, the color disc
on the camera televises one picture in red, the next in yellow, and the next in
blue, then it starts back with red again. The disc at the receiver end successively
colors the pictures red, yellow, and blue as they are received on the screen.
Persistence of vision on the part of the viewer assembles the red, blue, and yellow
pictures into a completely colored image. The big disadvantage of this
method is the inconvenience of having to look through a whirling disc in order
to view the color pictures. Another method of producing color television
paints the pictures electronically. The electronically painted color picture contains
more than three times as many elements as the black and white picture. It blends
about 900,000 tiny characters into each picture. Only 20 pictures a second can
be transmitted, compared to the 30 pictures a second sent by black and white television.
Color television is definitely on the way. When it does come, it will give
added realism and emotion to the television screen in addition to the new factors
of warmth, life, and beauty that black and white pictures do not possess. What
is the most important thing to you in buying a television set—quality of
picture, kind o f programs available, or color pictures? Surveys show that 83
per cent of the people in the United States want television sets in their homes.
Is $100 too much to ask them to pay for a set? Should they be denied television
until improved pictures are available? Will projection television be more popular
than direct view television? Should sets be built so that you can switch from
one to the other? Will the establishment of television stations in the bigger
cities cause people to move in from areas where television is not available? Will
color television render previously sold black and white transmitting and receiving
equipment obsolete? Should television be held up until color is perfected?
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