Richtige Fernseher haben Röhren!

Richtige Fernseher haben Röhren!

In Brief: On this site you will find pictures and information about some of the electronic, electrical and electrotechnical Obsolete technology relics that the Frank Sharp Private museum has accumulated over the years .
Premise: There are lots of vintage electrical and electronic items that have not survived well or even completely disappeared and forgotten.

Or are not being collected nowadays in proportion to their significance or prevalence in their heyday, this is bad and the main part of the death land. The heavy, ugly sarcophagus; models with few endearing qualities, devices that have some over-riding disadvantage to ownership such as heavy weight,toxicity or inflated value when dismantled, tend to be under-represented by all but the most comprehensive collections and museums. They get relegated to the bottom of the wants list, derided as 'more trouble than they are worth', or just forgotten entirely. As a result, I started to notice gaps in the current representation of the history of electronic and electrical technology to the interested member of the public.

Following this idea around a bit, convinced me that a collection of the peculiar alone could not hope to survive on its own merits, but a museum that gave equal display space to the popular and the unpopular, would bring things to the attention of the average person that he has previously passed by or been shielded from. It's a matter of culture. From this, the Obsolete Technology Tellye Web Museum concept developed and all my other things too. It's an open platform for all electrical Electronic TV technology to have its few, but NOT last, moments of fame in a working, hand-on environment. We'll never own Colossus or Faraday's first transformer, but I can show things that you can't see at the Science Museum, and let you play with things that the Smithsonian can't allow people to touch, because my remit is different.

There was a society once that was the polar opposite of our disposable, junk society. A whole nation was built on the idea of placing quality before quantity in all things. The goal was not “more and newer,” but “better and higher" .This attitude was reflected not only in the manufacturing of material goods, but also in the realms of art and architecture, as well as in the social fabric of everyday life. The goal was for each new cohort of children to stand on a higher level than the preceding cohort: they were to be healthier, stronger, more intelligent, and more vibrant in every way.

The society that prioritized human, social and material quality is a Winner. Truly, it is the high point of all Western civilization. Consequently, its defeat meant the defeat of civilization itself.

Today, the West is headed for the abyss. For the ultimate fate of our disposable society is for that society itself to be disposed of. And this will happen sooner, rather than later.

OLD, but ORIGINAL, Well made, Funny, Not remotely controlled............. and not Made in CHINA.

How to use the site:
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- The search this blog feature provided by Google is a real search engine. If you're pointing particular things it will search IT for you; or you can place a brand name in the search query at your choice and visit all results page by page. It's useful since the content of the site is very large.

Note that if you don't find what you searched for, try it after a period of time; the site is a never ending job !

Every CRT Television saved let revive knowledge, thoughts, moments of the past life which will never return again.........

Many contemporary "televisions" (more correctly named as displays) would not have this level of staying power, many would ware out or require major services within just five years or less and of course, there is that perennial bug bear of planned obsolescence where components are deliberately designed to fail and, or manufactured with limited edition specificities..... and without considering........picture......sound........quality........
..............The bitterness of poor quality is remembered long after the sweetness of todays funny gadgets low price has faded from memory........ . . . . . .....
Don't forget the past, the end of the world is upon us! Pretty soon it will all turn to dust!

Have big FUN ! !
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©2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014 Frank Sharp - You do not have permission to copy photos and words from this blog, and any content may be never used it for auctions or commercial purposes, however feel free to post anything you see here with a courtesy link back, btw a link to the original post here , is mandatory.
All sets and apparates appearing here are property of Engineer Frank Sharp. NOTHING HERE IS FOR SALE !
All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within Fair Use.


Saturday, January 14, 2012

PHILIPS 22C957 CEZANNE CHASSIS K12 (20AX) UNITS VIEW.




















SUPPLY 4822 212 20302

MATRIX 3122 133 31460

CHROMA 4822 212 20306

SOUND 4822 212 20599

MULTISTABILIZER 4822 212 20304

IF AMPLIFIER 4822 212 20309
3122 133 31490

E/W + 29 /32/225V SUPPLY 4822 212 20305
















SYNCRONIZATION 3122 133 31470

IF DETECTOR 3122 133 30480

FRAME DEFLECTION 20AX 4822 212 20303


TDA2581 CONTROL CIRCUIT FOR SMPS
The TDA2581 is a monolithic integrated circuit for controlling switched-mode power supplies (SMPS) which are provided with the drive for the horizontal deflection stage.
The circuit features the following:
— Voltage controlled horizontal oscillator.
— Phase detector.
— Duty factor control for the positive-going transient of the output signal.
— Duty factor increases from zero to its normal operation value.
— Adjustable maximum duty factor.
- Over-voltage and over-current protection with automatic re-start after switch-off.
— Counting circuit for permanent switch-off when n~times over~current or over-voltage is sensed

-Protection for open-reference voltage.
- Protection for too low supply voltage.
Protection against loop faults.
Positive tracking of duty factor and feedback voltage when the feedback voltage is smaller than the
reference voltage minus 1,5 V.

PHILIPS 22C957 CEZANNE CHASSIS K12 (20AX) E/W CORRECTION Circuit arrangement in an image display apparatus for (horizontal) line deflection:

Line deflection circuit in which the deflection coil is east-west modulated. In order to cancel an east-west dependent horizontal linearity defect the inductance value of the linearity correction coil is made independent of the field frequency, for example by means of a compensating current. In an embodiment this current is supplied by the shunt coil of the east-west modulator.



1. Circuit arrangement for use with a line deflection coil, said circuit comprising a generator means adapted to be coupled to said coil for producing a sawtooth line-deflection current through said line deflection coil, said deflection current having a field-frequency component current, a horizontal linearity correction coil adapted to be coupled in series with said deflection coil and including an inductor having a bias-magnetized core, and means for making the inductance value of the linearity correction coil substantially independent of the field frequency component current. 2. Circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said making means includes a current supply source means for producing a compensating line-frequency sawtooth current through a winding of the linearity correction coil, the amplitude of the compensating current having a field-frequency variation. 3. Circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the direction of curvature of the field-frequency envelope of the compensating current is opposite to the direction of curvature of the field-frequency component current of the line deflection current, whereby the magnetic fields produced in the core of the correction coil by the two currents have the same direction. 4. Circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the direction of curvature of the field-frequency envelope of the compensating current is the same as the direction of curvature of the field-frequency component current of the line deflection current, whereby the magnetic fields produced in the core of the correction coil by the two currents have opposite directions. 5. Circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein said correction coil further comprises an additional winding disposed on the core, said additional winding being coupled to said supply source means to receive the compensating current. 6. Circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 5, further comprising modulator means for modulating the line deflection current with said field frequency component, said modulator including a compensation coil coupled in series with said additional winding. 7. Horizontal linearity correction coil comprising a core made of a magnetic material and bias-magnetized by at least one permanent magnet, and an additional winding disposed on the core. 8. Image display apparatus including a circuit arrangement as claimed in claim 1.
Description:
The invention relates to a circuit arrangement in an image display apparatus for (horizontal) line deflection, which apparatus also includes a circuit arrangement for (vertical) field deflection, provided with a generator for generating a sawtooth line-frequency deflecting current through a line deflection coil and with a modulator for field-frequency modulation of this current, the deflection coil being connected in series with a linearity correction coil in the form of an inductor having a bias-magnetized core.
By means of the linearity correction coil the linearity error due to the ohmic resistance of the deflection circuit is corrected. The sign of the bias magnetisation is chosen so that it is cancelled by the deflection current at the beginning of the deflection interval, so that the inductance of the correction coil is a maximum, whereas the voltage drop across the deflection coil then is a minimum. This voltage drop is adjustable by adjustment of the starting inductance of the correction coil. During the deflection interval the core gradually becomes saturated so that the inductance of, and the voltage drop across, the correction coil decrease. Thus the linearity error can be cancelled exactly at the beginning of the interval, that is to say on the left on the screen of the image display tube, and with a certain approximation at other locations.
In image display tubes using a large deflection angle, raster distortion, which generally is pincushion-shaped, of the image displayed occurs. This distortion can be removed in the horizontal direction, the so-called east-west direction, by means of field-frequency modulation of the line deflection current, the envelope in the case of pincushion-shaped distortion being substantially parabolic so that the amplitude of the line deflection current is a maximum at the middle of the field deflection interval.
It was found in practice that the said two corrections are not independent of one another, that is to say the adjustment of the east-west modulation affects horizontal linearity. As long as the modulation depth is not excessive, a satisfactory compromise can be found. However, in display tubes having a deflection angle of 110° and particularly in colour display tubes in which the deflection coils have a converging effect also, it is difficult to find such a compromise. A tube of this type is described in "Philips Research Reports," volume Feb. 14, 1959, pages 65 to 97; the distribution of the deflection field is such that throughout the display screen the landing points of the electron beams coincide without the need for a converging device. Owing to this field distribution, however, the pin-cushion-shaped distortion in the image displayed in the east-west direction is greater than in comparable display tubes of another type. Hence there must be east-west modulation of the line deflection current to a greater depth. It is true that under these conditions horizontal linearity can correctly be adjusted over a given horizontal strip after the east-west modulation has been adjusted correctly, i.e., for a rectangular image, but it is found that in other parts of the display screen a serious linearity error remains. When vertical straight lines are displayed as straight lines in the right-hand part of the screen, they are displayed as curved lines in the left-hand part.
It is an object of the present invention to remove the said defect so that horizontal linearity can satisfactorily be adjusted throughout the screen, and for this purpose the circuit arrangement according to the invention is characterized in that it includes means by which the inductance of the linearity correction coil is made substantially independent of the field frequency.
The invention is based on the recognition that the defect to be removed is due to a field-frequency variation of the said inductance because the latter is current-dependent. According to a further recognition of the invention the circuit arrangement is characterized in that it includes a current supply source for producing a compensating line-frequency sawtooth current through a winding of the linearity correction coil, the amplitude of the current being field-frequency modulated. The circuit arrangement according to the invention may further be characterized in that an additional winding is provided on the core of the linearity correction coil and is traversed by the compensating current. A circuit arrangement in which the modulator for modulating the line deflection current includes a compensation or bridge coil may according to the invention be characterized in that the additional winding is connected in series with the said coil.
The invention also relates to a linearity correction coil for use in a line deflection circuit having a core which is made of a magnetic material and is bias magnetized by at least one permanent magnet, which coil is characterized in that an additional winding is provided on the core.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described by way of example, with reference to the accompanying diagrammatic drawings, in which
FIG. 1 is the circuit diagram of a known circuit arrangement for line deflection in which the line deflection current is east-west modulated,
FIG. 2 shows the distorted image which is displayed on the screen when the circuit arrangement of FIG. 1,
FIG. 3 is a graph explaining the observed defect, and
FIGS. 4 and 7 show embodiments of the circuit arrangement according to the invention by which this defect can be cancelled.
FIG. 1 is a greatl simplified circuit diagram of a line deflection circuit of an image display apparatus, not shown further. The circuit includes the series combination of a line deflection coil L y , a linearity correction coil L and a trace capacitor C t , which series combination is traversed by the line deflection current i y . The collector of an npn switching transistor T r and one end of a choke coil L 1 are connected to a junction point A of a diode D, a capacitor C r and the said series combination. The other end of the choke coil is connected to the positive terminal of a supply voltage source which supplies a substantially constant direct voltage V b and to the negative terminal of which the emitter of transistor Tr is connected. This negative terminal may be connected to earth. The other junction point B of elements D and C r and of the series combination of elements C t , L y and L is connected to one terminal of a modulation source M for east-west correction which has its other terminal connected to earth. Diode D has the pass direction shown in the FIG.
To the base of transistor Tr line-frequency switching pulses are supplied. In known manner the said series combination is connected to the supply voltage source during the deflection interval (the trace time), diode D and transistor Tr conducting alternately. During the retrace time these elements are both cut off. Under these conditions the current i y is a sawtooth current. The coil L, which has a saturable ferrite core which is bias-magnetized by means of at least one permanent magnet, serves to correct the linearity of the current i y during the trace time, whilst the capacitance of the capacitor C t is chosen so that the currenct i y is subjected to what is generally referred to as S correction. During the retrace time, at point A pulses are produced the amplitude of which is much higher than that of the voltage V b and would be constant in the absence of modulation source M. Information from the field deflection circuit, not shown, of the image display apparatus and line retrace pulses, the latter for example by means of a transformer, are supplied in known manner to modulation source M. Amplitude-modulated line retrace pulses having a field-frequency parabolic envelope, as indicated in the FIG., are produced at point B. During the line trace time the voltage at point B is zero. Thus the current i y is given the desired field-frequency modulated form which is also shown in FIG. 1.
The amplitude of the envelope in point B at the beginning and at the end of the field trace time and the amplitude of this envelope at the middle of the said time can both be adjusted so that the image displayed on the display screen of the display tube (not shown) has the correct substantially rectangular form. If, however, the required modulation depth is comparatively large, a linearity error of the line deflection is produced which cannot be removed by means of the correction coil L.
FIG. 2 shows the image of a pattern of vertical straight lines as it is displayed on the screen with the correction coil L adjusted so that horizontal linearity is satisfactory along and near the central horizontal line. In FIG. 2 the defect is exaggerated. It is found that horizontal linearity is defective in other areas of the screen so that the vertical lines are displayed correctly in the right-hand half of the screen but as curves in the left-hand path, the defect increasing as the line is farther to the left.
This phenomenon can be explained with reference to FIG. 3. In this FIG. the inductance L of the linearity correction coil is plotted as a function of the magnetic field strength H. In the absence of current, H has a value H 0 owing to the bias magnetization. If an approximately linear sawtooth current i (t) as shown in the bottom left-hand part of FIG. 3 flows through the coil, the field strength H varies proportionally about the value H 0 , for the mean value of the current is zero. Because the curve of L is not linear, the variation L(t) of L, which is shown in the top right-hand part, is not a linear function of time. The resulting curve may be regarded as composed of a linear component and a substantially parabolic component which is to be taken into account when choosing the capacitance of capacitor C t .
Because owing to the east-west modulation the amplitude of current i(t) varies, the amplitude of L(t) also varies. This implies a field-frequency variation of L which is non-linear. This variation is undesirable. In the case of a small variation of the amplitude of current i(t) the variation of L(t) can be more or less neglected, but this is no longer possible when the amplitude of current i(t) varies greatly owing to the east-west modulation. L(t) varies according to different curves. FIG. 3 shows two of such curves and also illustrates the fact that the undesirable variation of L(t) is greatest at the beginning of the trace time and smallest at the end thereof.
FIG. 4 shows a circuit arrangement in which the defect described can be corrected. On the core of the correction coil L of the circuit of FIG. 1 an additional winding L 2 is provided. Winding L 2 is connected to a current source which produces a compensating current i 2 which has a line-frequency sawtooth variation and a field-frequency amplitude modulation. The envelope here also is parabolic, however, with a shape opposite to that of deflection current i y , that is to say having a minimum at the middle of the field trace time. The direction of current i 2 and the winding sense of winding L 2 relative to that of coil L are chosen so that the magnetic field produced in the core by winding L 2 has the same direction as the field produced by coil L. Hence the two field strengths are added. The amplitude of current i 2 and the turns number of winding L 2 can be chosen so that current i y flows through inductances the total value of which is not dependent upon the field frequency. The curve L(t) of FIG. 3 remains substantially unchanged. Consequently the undesirable field-frequency modulation is removed without variation of the bias magnetization, which would have been varied if current i 2 were a field-frequency current. Obviously the same result can be achieved by a choice such of the direction of current i 2 and of the winding sense of winding L 2 that the two field strengths are subtracted one from the other, whilst the curvature of the envelope of current i 2 has the same direction as that of the envelope of current i y .
The current source of FIG. 4 may be formed in known manner by means of a modulator in which a line-frequency sawtooth signal is field-frequency modulated, the envelope being parabolic. FIG. 5 shows a circuit arrangement in which current i 2 is produced by the modulation source which provides the east-west correction. In FIG. 5, the source M of FIG. 1 comprises a diode D', a coil L' and two capacitors C' r and C' t , which elements constitute a network of the same structure as the network formed by elements D, L y , C r and C t . The capacitor C' t is shunted by a modulation source V m which supplies a field-frequency parabolic voltage having a minimum at the middle of the field trace time.
With the exception of the linearity correction means to be described hereinafter, the circuit arrangement of FIG. 5 was described in more detail in U.S. Pat. No. 3,906,305. Hence it will be sufficient to mention that the capacitances of capacitors C r and C' r and of a capacitor C 1 connected between junction point A and earth and the inductance of coil L' are chosen so that the three sawtooth currents flowing through L y , L' and L 1 have the same retrace time. The capacitances of capacitors C t and C' t , which are large, are ignored. When voltage V b is constant, current i y is subjected to the desired east-west modulation having the form shown in FIG. 1.
Coil L y is connected in series with correction coil L, and winding L 2 is connected in series with coil L'. FIG. 5 shows that the current flowing through winding L 2 has the same waveform as the current i 2 of FIG. 4, for its envelope has the same shape as the voltage supplied by source V m . By a suitable choice of the number of turns of winding L 2 it can be ensured that the linearity correction remains the same for every line during the field trace time.
Modified embodiments of the circuit arrangement of FIG. 5 can also be used. FIG. 6 shows such a modified embodiment in which the capacitive voltage divider C r , C' r of FIG. 5 is replaced by an inductive voltage divider by means of a tapping on coil L 1 . A capacitor C 2 is included between the tapping and the junction point of diodes D and D', whilst capacitor C' t here forms part of two networks C t , L y and C' t , L' traversed by a sawtooth current. In FIG. 6 modulation source V m is connected via a choke coil L 3 to the junction point of D, D', C 2 and C' t . One end of winding L 2 is connected to the junction point of capacitor C' t and the coil L, whilst the other end is connected to earth via coil L'. The capacitances of capacitors C 1 and C 2 and the location of the tapping on coil L 1 are chosen so that the sawtooth currents flowing through L y , and L' and L 1 have the same retrace time, whilst the field-frequency linearity defect of FIg. 2 is cancelled by correctly proportioning winding L 2 .
Other east-west modulators are known in which the step of FIGS. 5 and 6 can be used. An example is the modulator described in the publication by Philips, Electronic Components and Materials: "110° Colour television receiver with A66-140X standard-neck picture tube and DT 1062 multisection saddle yoke," May 1971, pages 19 and 20, which modulator also comprises two diodes and a compensation coil L', which are arranged in a slightly different manner. In another example the east-west modulator and the line deflection generator are included in a bridge circuit whilst they are decoupled from one another by means of a bridge coil which has the same function as coil L' in FIGS. 5 and 6. In these circuit arrangements coil L and winding L 2 may be arranged in the same manner as in FIG. 6. The same applies to an east-west modulator using a transductor the operating winding of which is in series with the deflection coil.
In the abovedescribed embodiments of the circuit arrangement according to the invention the compensating current i 1 is provided by transformer action. In the embodiment of FIG. 7 the current source which supplies the current i 2 is connected in parallel with correction coil L, i.e., without an auxiliary winding. In this embodiment the east-west modulation is achieved not by means of a modulator, but by means of the fact that the supply voltage V b is the super-position of a field-frequency parabolic voltage on the direct voltage. In this known manner the supply source also is the modulator.
It will be seen that in the embodiments of FIGS. 4, 5 and 6 current i 2 counteracts the east-west modulation of deflection current i y . It was found in practice, however, that this counteraction is slight.



PHILIPS 22C957 CEZANNE CHASSIS K12 (20AX) Line oscillator synchronizing circuit:
A television receiver having a line synchronizing circuit wherein gate pulses for keying the synchronizing signal are derived from the oscillator signal, the gate pulses being positioned, by means of an auxiliary phase control loop, substantially symmetrical relative to an edge of a reference signal also derived from the oscillator signal. The auxiliary control loop also eliminates the influence of phase variations occurring in the line deflection circuit.



1. A television receiver having a line deflection circuit and a line synchronizing circuit, said line synchronizing circuit comprising a controllable oscillator, a signal derived therefrom being applicable to said line deflection circuit; a pulse generator coupled to said oscillator for deriving pulse-shaped gate signals; a coincidence detector; means for applying said pulse-shaped gate signals and pulse-shaped line synchronizing signals to said coincidence detector; a first phase discriminator coupled to said coincidence detector for determining the phase difference between said line synchronizing signal and a reference signal derived from said oscillator signal; a first low-pass filter for smoothing the output voltage from said first phase discriminator, said controllable oscillator being coupled to said first low-pass filter whereby the output therefrom controls the frequency and/or phase of said controllable oscillator; a second phase discriminator for determining the interval between the center instant of a pulse of said pulse-shaped gate signal and the center instant of an edge occurring in said reference signal; a second low-pass filter for smoothing the output voltage from said second phase discriminator; and means for controlling the center instant of the edge in said reference signal using the output from said second low-pass filter; wherein said line synchronizing circuit further comprises gate means having a first input terminal for receiving the output from said pulse generator and a second input terminal for receiving an output signal from said line deflection circuit, said gate means also having an output terminal for generating the gate pulses for said coincidence detector and said second phase dis
criminator. 2. A television receiver as claimed in claim 1, wherein said controlling means comprises a differential amplifier for amplifying the difference between the second smoothed voltage and a reference voltage, the time position of an edge of the oscillator signal being controllable by the output signal of the differential amplifier. 3. A television receiver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the time constant of the second low-pass filter is at least ten times smaller than the time constant of the first low-pass filter. 4. A television receiver as claimed in claim 1, wherein the gate means comprises an AND-gate, a first input terminal of which is the second input terminal of the gate means and a second input terminal of said AND-gate is supplied with a signal originating from the controllable oscillator, and an OR-gate, a first input terminal of which is the first input terminal of the gate means and a second terminal of said OR-gate is connected to the output terminal of the AND-gate, the output terminal of the OR-gate being the output terminal of the gate means. 5. A television receiver as claimed in claim 1, wherein said line sychronizing circuit further comprises an amplifier for amplfying the first smoothed voltage, the output voltage of which is supplied to the pulse generator. 6. A television receiver as claimed in any of the preceeding claims, wherein said line synchronizing circuit, with the exception of capacitors forming a part of said low-pass filters, is integrated in a semiconductor body.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a television receiver comprising a line synchronizing circuit and also comprising a line deflection circuit, the line synchronizing circuit comprising a controllable oscillator for generating an oscillator signal applicable to the line deflection circuit and being provided with means for applying a pulse-shaped line synchronizing signal and a pulse-shaped gate, which which is derived from the oscillator signal by means of a pulse generator, to a coincidence stage, an output terminal of which is connected to a first phase discriminator for determining the phase difference between the synchronizing signal and a reference signal which is also derived from the oscillator signal, the line synchronizing circuit being further provided with a first low-pass filter for smoothing the output voltage of the first phase discriminator, the frequency and/or phase of the oscillator being controllable by the first smoother voltage thus obtained, with a second phase discriminator for determining the interval between the center instant of a gate pulse and the center instant of an edge occurring in the reference signal, and with a second low-pass filter for smoothing the output voltage of the second phase discriminator, the center instant of said edge being controllable by means of the second smoothed voltage thus obtained. Such a line synchronizing circuit is disclosed in Applicant's Dutch Patent Application No. 7511633 (PHN.8169). In this known circuit a second phase control loop, which comprises the second discriminator and the second low-pass filter ensures that said two instants substantially coincide so that the gate pulses are substantially symmetrical relative to the edge of the reference signal. Consequently, the gate pulses may be of a very short duration, so that the insensitivity to noise is increased. The output signal of the circuit can be applied to the line deflection circuit ensuring that its phase is fixed relative to that of the received line synchronizing pulses.
It may, however, happen that phase variations occur in the line deflection circuit, for example because the turn-off time of a switch, usually a power transistor, present in said circuit is not constant. In order to reinstate the desired fixed phase relation between the deflection and the received synchronizing pulses, it is proposed in said patent application to apply the output signal of the present circuit first to a phase discriminator in which it is compared in known manner to a signal originating from the deflection circuit. This implies a third phase control loop. Consequently, the synchronizing circuit becomes complicated and more difficult to be implemented in integrated form.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide a synchronizing circuit comprising only two phase-controlled loops and, to this end, the receiver according to the invention is characterized by a gate having a first input terminal for receivng the output signal of the pulse generator and a second input terminal for receiving an output signal of the line deflection circuit and having an output terminal for applying the gate pulses thus obtained to the coincidence state and to the second phase discriminator.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will be further explained by way of non-limitative example with reference to the accompanying figures in which
FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of an implementation of a portion of a television receiver according to the invention and
FIGS. 2 and 3 show wave forms which may be used therein.
In FIG. 1 reference numeral 1 denotes the input terminal of the line synchronizing circuit. Line synchronizing pulses, having the line repetition frequency f H , i.e., for example, 15,625 or 15,750 Hz, are present at the input terminal. These pulses are derived, in known manner in the television receiver, not shown, of which the circuit forms part, from the received signal in a synchronizing-separation stage and are applied to an input terminal of an AND-gate 2. FIG. 2a shows the variation versus the time of these pulses. Herein the symbol T H denotes the line period, i.e. approximately 64 μs.
FIG. 2b shows the variation of gate pulses which are applied to another input terminal of gate 2 and which are generated in the circuit in a manner still to be explained hereafter. FIG. 2b shows each gate pulse symmetrically relative to the center instant t o of the corresponding line synchronising pulse of FIG. 2a. As known this pulse has a duration of, for example, 4.5 to 5 μs. The gate pulses have a somewhat longer duration of, for example, 7.7 μs. The output signal of gate 2 is applied to a controllable switch 3. If the pulses at the inputs of gate 2, as in FIG. 2, occur at least partly simultaneously, then switch 3 is made conductive for the duration of that portion of the line synchronizing pulses.
Switch 3 is supplied with a line frequency reference signal which is generated in a manner still to be explained hereafter and which is shown in FIG. 2c. In the synchronized state it has a falling edge at instant t o and a rising edge at an instant which is, for example, in the center of the time interval between instant t o and the corresponding instant t 1 one cycle later.
In these circumstances the voltage shown in FIG. 2d is present at the output terminal of switch 3. After smoothing by means of a low-pass filter 4, a d.c. voltage is produced which is supplied to a voltage controlled oscillator 5, whose frequency and/or phase is adjusted hereby. Switch 3 behaves as a phase discriminator by means of which the falling edge of the signal of FIG. 2c is adjusted to the center instant t o of the pulse of FIG. 2a. If the frequency of the signal of FIG. 2c deviates from the value f H , then the phase difference between this signal and that of FIG. 2a varies continuously. The control voltage supplied
to oscillator 5 is then an a.c. voltage, namely until the two frequencies are equal again, wherafter the control voltage is a d.c. voltage.
Oscillator 5 is also supplied with a d.c. voltage V o of, for example, 3 V on which the control voltage just mentioned is superimposed. Voltage V o may correspond to the nominal frequency of the line synchronizing pulses in accordance with the television standard for which the television receiver is suited. In the described implementation, however, the signal generated by oscillator 5 has, in the nominal case, a frequency 2f H which is double the line frequency. This signal is applied to a frequency divider circuit 6 in which the frequency is divided by the number of lines per picture in the relevant standard, being, for example, 625 or 525. A field frequency signal of, for example, 50 or 60 Hz, is available at an output terminal of divider circuit 6 in the synchronized state of the line phase-controlled loop, which signal can be applied to a field synchronizing circuit of known type.
The sawtooth signal shown in FIG. 3a is derived from the signal of oscillator 5, the sawtooth signal being applied to a pulse generator 7. By means of a d.c. voltage level V 1 which is applied to generator 7 and which is generated in a manner still to be explained, the sawtooth signal is converted in this generator into a pulse-shaped signal (FIG. 3b). The leading edges of these pulses and the rising edges in FIG. 3a occur simultaneously; while the instant of occurrence of the trailing edges of the pulses is determined by the value of voltage V 1 . These pulses are applied to a frequency dividing circuit 8 which, for example, is a binary divider circuit of known type, for example a master-slave flip-flop. The output signals thereof have the line frequency f H . The signal at an output terminal Q s thereof (see FIG. 3c) changes levels each time a falling edge occurs in the signal of FIG. 3b, while the signal at an output terminal Q m of circuit 8 (see FIG. 3d) changes levels each time a rising edge occurs in the signal of FIG. 3b. This implies that the signal of FIG. 3b is fixed relative to the time axis while the position of the signal of FIG. 3c depends on the value of voltage V 1 .
The signal at terminal Q m is the signal which is applied as a reference signal to switch 3, while the signal at terminal Q s is applied to a pulse shaper 9. The output signal thereof has the variation which is suitable for being applied, possibly via a driver stage, to a line output stage 10. Stage 10 supplies a line frequency current to the deflection coil, not shown, for the horizontal deflection in the picture display tube. Stage 10 comprises a switch usually a power transistor, whose turn-on time is relatively short, while its turn-off time is considerable, namely in the order of 10 μs. This is caused by the fact that the charge carriers, which are present in an excess in the saturated transistor, must first be removed. As known, the turn-off time depends on variations in the load of stage 10, for example the beam current in the picture display tube. In known manner, the adverse influence of such variations can be compensed for, for example by including a phase-controlled loop between oscillator 5 and the output of stage 10, this loop comprising a phase discriminator, a low-pass filter as well as an oscillator or a phase-shifting network. A signal originating from the output of stage 10 is used as a reference signal for this loop. Dutch Patent Application No. 7103465 (PHN.5499) discloses such a phase-controlled loop. A compensation is effected in the circuit of FIG. 1 in a different manner, which will be explained in the further course of this description.
The sawtooth voltage of FIG. 3a is also applied to a pulse generator 11 in which the sawtooth signal is converted into the pulse-shaped signal of FIG. 3e by means of a d.c. voltage V 2 applied thereto. The rising edges thereof occur simultaneously with those of FIG. 3a while the falling edges occur at the instants at which the sawtooth signal attains the value V 2 . In this manner the frequency of these pulses would have the double line frequency 2f H . However, the signal at the terminal Q m of divider circuit 8 is also applied to generator 11, thus, each rising edge of this signal cuts off generator 11. Other line frequency signals, for example line flyback pulses originating from stage 10, can also be used for this same purpose. The pulses obtained are applied to an input terminal of an OR-gate 12.
FIG. 3f shows line flyback pulses present in output stage 10, for example across a winding of a transformer thereof. For simplicity they are depicted as sine-shaped waves. They occur from approximately the instant at which the switch in stage 10 is switched-off, that is to say a time 96 after the occurrence of a falling edge of signal Q s (FIG. 3c) which time τ may be variable, while the duration of these pulses is substantially constant. The pulses of FIG. 3f are applied to an input terminal of an AND-gate 13, while another input terminal is connected to terminal Q m of the frequencies divider 8. The output terminal of gate 13 is connected to an input terminal of gate 12.
From FIGS. 3d and 3f it appears that the output signal of gate 13 has a leading edge from a time τ after the occurrence of a falling edge of signal Q s , and a trailing edge at the instant at which a falling edge of signal Q m occurs. The output signal of gate 12 has a leading edge at the same instant at which the leading edge of the output signal of gate 13 occurs and a trailing edge at the same instant at which the trailing edge of generator 11 occurs. The pulses at the output terminal of gate 12 are shown in FIG. 3g and are the gate pulses of FIG. 2b which are applied to gate 2. The leading edges thereof occur at instants which depend on the delay τ produced in output stage 10, while the instants at which the trailing edges occur depend only on the, optionally adjustable, voltage V 2 . These pulses do not contain any information concerning the signal Q m , in spite of the fact that Q m is one of the input signals of gate 13, which information is, for the rest not necessary. Said input signal is only used for removing the portion of the pulse of FIG. 3f occurring after the falling edge of signal Q m . The same result can be achieved by means of, for example, a bistable multivibrator, the output signal of which has a leading edge at the same instant as the flyback pulse and a trailing edge at the same instant as the signal of generator 11.
A phase discriminator 14, implemented as a controllable switch, is supplied with the reference signal at the output terminal Q m of divider circuit 8 (FIG. 3d) as well as with the gate pulses originating from gate 12. Switch 14 conducts during the occurrence of the gate pulses and its output voltage is smoothed by a low-pass filter 15.
The smoothed voltage obtained, as well as a d.c. voltage V 3 , derived from the supply voltage of the circuit, are supplied to a differential amplifier 16. The output voltage thereof is the voltage V 1 which is supplied to pulse generator 7. As a result thereof the duration of the pulses of FIG. 3b and, consequently, also the position along the time axis of the edges of signal Q s , depend on the value of the smoothed voltage. Elements 7 to 16 inclusive constitute an auxiliary control loop which operates so that each gate pulse of FIG. 3g remains symmetrical relative to the edge of the reference signal of FIG. 3d and, consequently, also relative to the center instant of the synchronizing pulse of FIG. 2a. This determines the duration of the gate pulse. Since, if the duration of the synchronizing pulse is 4.7 μs while the duration of the flyback pulse is 12 μs and if the interval between the starting instant of the flyback pulse (that is to say that of the blanking pulse in the received video signal) and the starting instant of the synchronizing pulse is equal to 1.5 μs, then the period of time between the leading edge in FIG. 2b and instant t o is equal, in the ideal case, to 1.5 +(4.7/2)=3.85 μs. Due to the action of voltage V 2 in stage 11 and of the auxiliary control loop, the trailing edge in FIG. 2b occurs 3.85 μs after instant t o , so that the duration of the gate pulse is 7.7 μs. In practice the pulse will be somewhat longer but it is obvious that, due to this rather short period of time, it is ensured that the sensitivity of the circuit to noise and disturbances is low, which especially holds for disturbances caused by reflection.
The final state of the auxiliary control loop is attained after a time which is independent of the frequency of oscillator 5, while the auxiliary control loop cannot experience an adverse influence from noise and disturbances. The time constant of filter 15 can therefore be chosen at will. Dutch Patent Application No. 7511633 (PHN.8169) describes all this more extensively. Because, however, the variations of delay τ can be rapid, this time constant must be many times smaller, for example ten times as small as that of filter 4.
If the frequency of oscillator 5 varies, for example due to a variation in the supply voltage, or if the frequency of the received line synchronisation pulses varies, for example because a switch-over to another transmitter is effected, the oscillator 4 is so adjusted by the operation of the control loop formed by elements 3 to 8 inclusive that the situation indicated in FIG. 2 occurs. This implies that the waveforms of the FIGS. 3a, 3b, 3c, 3d and 3e are shifted along the time axis until the leading edges of the pulses of FIG. 3a occur at the center instants of the synchronizing pulses of FIG. 2a. In this way it is ensured that also the trailing edges of the pulses of FIG. 3e and, consequently, also those of the gate pulses of FIGS. 3g and 2b are fixed relative to the synchronizing pulses.
If now the delay τ between the falling edge of the signal of FIG. 3c and the starting instant of the flyback pulse of FIG. 3f vary and/or if a shift of the gate pulses of FIG. 3g occurs relative to the reference signal of FIG. 3d as a result of spread in the properties of the various components and/or of inequalities of the transition times in the various transistors etc., then the pulse generator 7 is so adjusted by the operation of auxiliary control loop 7 to 16 inclusive that the situation shown in FIG. 3d occurs. In this situation the input voltage, originating from filter 15, of differential amplifier 16 is substantially equal to the voltage V 3 . Prior to the occurrence of this situation, said voltages deviate from one another, so that voltage V 1 varies. As a result, the position of the trailing edges of the pulses of FIG. 3b and, consequently, also the position of the edges of the signal Q s of FIG. 3 c change. Thus, the signal Q s is shifted along the time axis until the flyback pulses of FIG. 3f are fixed relative to the synchronizing pulses of FIG. 2a. Therefore, it is ensured, by means of the auxiliary control loop, that the influence of variations in time τ are considerably reduced and that the gate pulses shift only a little relative the reference signal, so that they may be of a short duration.
As in the previously mentioned Dutch Patent Application No. 7511633, the d.c. voltage V o , which is supplied to oscillator 5 in the absence of a control voltage originating from filter 4 and cause the oscillator to generate a signal having the nominal frequency, may be derived from the output voltage of filter 15. Also a pulse may be derived from one of the signals of FIG. 2 or FIG. 3, for example the sawtooth signal of FIG. 3a, for keying out the color synchronizing signal, which pulse may also be used for stabilising the black level. A coincidence detector may be used with which it is possible to reinstate the at least partly simultaneous occurrence of the gate pulses and the synchronizing pulses. In the case of non-coincidence, the gate pulses assume a longer duration, or the supply load for the gate pulses to gate 2 is interrupted, while the loop gain of control loop 3 to 8 inclusive is increased. As known, the locking-in property of the loop is improved by means of this switch-over.
As this loop gain cannot be infinitely large, the situation shown in FIG. 2 does not as a rule occur, that is to say there always remains a residual error. This means that the edge of the reference signal of FIG. 2c occurs, in the nominal state, at an instant which slightly deviates from instant t o , so that the voltage supplied to oscillator 5 slightly deviates from the value V o . The circuit of FIG. 1 is improved in this respect.
The control voltage which is supplied to oscillator 5 is also supplied to an amplifier 17. The output voltage thereof is the voltage V 2 which is supplied to pulse generator 11. Amplifier 17 is so dimensioned that the abovementioned error is corrected. If the error is, for example, such that the falling edge of the signal of FIG. 2c occurs somewhat too early relative to instant t o then amplifier 17 must have a gain of such a value and such a sign that voltage V 2 in FIG. 3a increases by a suitable value. This cause the falling edges in FIG. 3e and, consequently, in FIG. 3g to be shifted to the left. Due to the operation of the auxiliary control loop, when the gate pulses of FIG. 3g are substantially symmetrical in the synchronized state relative to instant t o , the rising edges in FIG. 3g are shifted to the right so that the gate pulses are given a shorter duration. The consequence of the outlined shift is that the flyback pulses occur somewhat later than is the case in FIG. 3f, so that also the signal Q s of FIG. 3c is shifted to the right. This means an identical shift of the falling edges of the signal of FIG. 3b and, consequently, a decrease of voltage V 1 . In this manner a small error is introduced in the auxiliary control loop so that the flyback pulses are slightly shifted relative to the reference signal, whose position along the time axis does not depend on voltage V 1 but, as a consequence of which, with a suitable design of amplifier 17, the flyback pulses are fixed relative to the synchronizing pulses. The center instant of a flyback pulse thus occurs at instant t o . A certain value can be assigned to voltage V 2 in the absence of a control voltage at the input terminal of amplifier 17; the duration of the gate pulses is adjusted by this setting. It will be obvious that a similar adjustment can also be applied in the case amplifier 17 is not present.
The foregoing discusses the idealised wave forms of FIGS. 2 and 3. It is obvious that both the leading and trailing edges in, for example, FIG. 2b and the edges in, for example, FIG. 2c have in practice no infinitely steep slope but a kind of sawtooth shape. Consequently, the symmetry aimed at means that the center instants of the pulses in FIG. 2b and of the edges in FIG. 2c occur substantially simultaneously, wherein center instant must be understood to mean in the first-mentioned case the instant located in the center of the time interval between which the signal is higher than half its maximum value and in the second case the instant at which half of the maximum value is achieved.
During the locking-in of the auxiliary control loop the position of the gate pulses varies in the described circuit along the time axis while that of the reference signal remains unchanged. It is clear that an implementation can be realised in which the position of the gate pulses is not affected
by the control, while the position of the reference signal varies.
With the exception of capacitors which are part of filters 4 and 15, the described circuits can be integrated in a semiconductor body. In the preceding the oscillator has in the nominal state double the line frequency. It will be obvious that this is not essential for the invention, that is to say the invention can also be used if the nominal frequency is the line frequency or another multiple thereof.

PHILIPS 22C957 CEZANNE CHASSIS K12 AUTOMATIC VIDEO CONTRAST CONTROL CIRCUIT
An automatic video contrast control circuit in video signal processing for continuously detecting peak white and peak black levels and providing control signals therefrom to process the incoming video so that contrast is maximized by redefining the video black level and white level of the outgoing video. The method of signal processing comprises detection of the peak white and peak black amplitudes of the incoming video signals and then utilizing the voltage differential between the peak amplitudes to establish a plurality of bias levels for individual voltage level channel comparators which quantize the incoming video into a plurality of successive level signals which when combined and coupled to a display system provide the aforementioned contrast enhancement of the image.

This invention relates to video contrast control circuits and more particularly to systems and circuits for improving the contrast of video signals having low contrast picture contrast.

Improvements in systems which develop a video signal have been proposed for increasing the contrast between areas of different apparent brightness on the viewed object. One approach to improvement of contrast between areas of different apparent brightness which has been proposed is by amplification of the video signal however for technical reasons it is usually not practical to amplify the entire amplitude range of the video signal and it therefore becomes necessary to provide some means for selecting for processing a particular amplitude range of the time varying video signal as for example is done in U. S. Pat. No. 3,205,446 to ALTEMUS. ALTEMUS is a manual control system which requires touch up by an operator for the system to extract maximum contrast. Another approach to contrast expansion is shown in U. S. Pat. No. 2,865,991 to Risner which however fails to define the black level in the picture and therefore does not create a new black level in the processed video but utilizes the existent black level and amplifies white level signals in a single ended type approach.

It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide video contrast enhancement by peak black and white level amplitude detection of each field of video information signal and utilization of the voltage differential between peaks to control subsequent video signal processing of video signal information in each successive field of the reconstructed video.

It is a further object of the present invention to provide means for detecting peak black and white components in each field of a standard video type signal and utilizing these signals to bias a plurality of digital comparators for converting analog television picture information wherein the digital pulses are subsequently summed in a video amplifier to provide the output video picture information signal.

These and other objects of the invention are accomplished by coupling the composite input video signal in common to the positive terminals of a plurality of digital comparator circuits for converting the analog type television picture information signals into digital form, and also coupling the composite input video signals to a pair of channels for detecting peak white and peak black video levels respectively. The outputs of the pair of channels are differentially applied across a series resistor type potential divider for division into an equal number of steps. The potential steps obtained from the divider are applied to the respective comparators as comparison levels therefor. The video contrast circuit is arranged to provide real time automatic video contrast expansion of a video signal of varying amplitude utilizing peak white and peak black level control signals to reestablish a new white and black level in the processed video signal.


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