CRT TUBE MULLARD A51EAL00X + CRT SOCKET TNP17981.
NOTE: The MULLARD certification paper included in the right side of the cabinet.
FLAT SQUARE Hi-Bri COLOUR PICTURE TUBES.
* Flat and square screen
• 90° deflection
• In-line, hi-bi potential A R T* gun
• 29, 1 mm neck diameter
• Mask with corner suspension
• Hi-Bri technology
• Pigmented phosphors
• Quick-heating low-power cathodes
• Soft flash
• Slotted shadow mask optimized for minimum moire at 625 lines system
• Internal magnetic shield
• Internal multipole
• Reinforced envelope for push-through mounting
•
The tube is supplied with a matched hybrid saddle toroidal deflection
unit of the AT6035 series; it forms a self-converging and raster
correction free assembly.
Type A51EAL10X is identical to type A51 EAL00X, except for the base: JEDEC BB-274; see the
relevant paragraph of "Mechanical Data".
Type A51 EAL20X is identical to type A51 EAL00X, except for the rimband, see dimensional
drawings of "Mechanical Data".
Type A51 EAL30X is identical to type A51 EAL00X, except for the light transmission of face glass
at centre: 52%..
Mullard Limited was a British manufacturer of electronic components. The Mullard Radio Valve Co. Ltd. of Southfields, London, was founded in 1920 by Captain Stanley R. Mullard, who had previously designed valves for the Admiralty before becoming managing director of the Z Electric Lamp Co. The company soon moved to Hammersmith, London and then in 1923 to Balham, London. The head office in later years was Mullard House in Torrington Place, Bloomsbury, which is now part of University College London.
Factories
Mitcham
Mullard opened a new manufacturing plant at Mitcham, Surrey in 1929. A second building was added in 1936. Both buildings had a very distinctive flat roof construction and were very similar to those at Philips' headquarters in Eindhoven, Netherlands. Co-sited with the Mullard buildings was the manufacturing complex for Philips Radios. Mitcham was also home to the Mullard Application Laboratory.
Blackburn
In the late 1930s Mullard opened a new plant in Blackburn, Lancashire. By 1949 Mullard had produced a number of television sets, such as the MTS-521 and MTS-684. In 1951 Mullard was producing the LSD series of photographic flash tubes.
Others
Mullard had factories in Southport and Simonstone, Burnley both in Lancashire. The latter was closed in 2004. There was also a sister factory in Durham. Other factories included those at Fleetwood (closed in 1979) and Lytham St. Annes (closed in 1972). A feeder factory at Haydock closed in 1981.
Partnership with Philips
In 1923, in order to meet the technical demands of the newly formed BBC, Mullard formed a partnership with the Dutch manufacturer Philips. The valves (US vacuum tube) produced in this period were named with the prefix PM, for Philips-Mullard, beginning with the PM3 and PM4 in 1926. Mullard finally sold all its shares to Philips in 1927. In 1928 the company introduced the first pentode valve to the British market.
Teletext
In the early 1980s, Mullard manufactured some of the earliest teletext decoding modules made in the UK.
Semiconductors
Mullard owned semiconductor factories in Southampton and Stockport. Both sites are now owned by NXP Semiconductors (formerly Philips Semiconductors). The one in Hazel Grove, Stockport specializes in power semiconductor devices.
The first transistors produced by Mullard were the OC50 and OC51 point-contact types, which were not widely used. In 1953 Mullard moved to junction transistors, beginning with the plastic-cased OC10 series. These were followed by the glass-encapsulated OC70 and OC80 series (the output devices were metal encapsulated to facilitate heatsinking), which were produced in large numbers and copied by other companies, such as Valvo (another Philips subsidiary), Intermetall and Siemens in Germany, and Amperex in the USA. In 1964 the company produced a prototype electronic desktop calculator as a technology demonstrator for its transistors and cold cathode indicator tubes.
Space science
In 1957 Philips-Mullard helped to set up the Mullard Radio Astronomy Observatory (MRAO) at the University of Cambridge. In 1966 the Mullard Space Science Laboratory (MSSL) was opened near Dorking, Surrey as part of University College London. The Royal Society Mullard Award[1] for young scientists and engineers was set up in 1967.
Mullard brand name
Philips continued to use the brand name "Mullard" in the UK until 1988. Mullard Research Laboratories in Redhill, Surrey then became Philips Research Laboratories. As of 2007, the Mullard brand has been revived by Sovtek, producing a variant of the ECC83 and EL34.
Z Electric Lamp Company
The Z Electric Lamp Co. continued business into the 1970s operating from premises in Thornton Heath near Croydon, Surrey, England manufacturing lamps of specialised design. However, they went out of business due to the recession brought about by the high inflation of the mid 1970s.
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