














The chassis is clearly a BLAUPUNKT 1560-1 modular type and with pretty rare Thyristor horizontal output for a B/W tellye.
The unit have Italian translation for the Unit names because they were customized for the PHILCO Italian factory which has made this model even if the chassis is a BLAUPUNKT.
- ORIZZONTALE (HORIZONTAL UNIT REGULATOR) 396504650
- VIDEO UNIT 396504630
- VERTICALE (FRAME UNIT) 396504640
- SUONO (SOUND IF + AMPL) TBA120 396504620
- I.F. UNIT 8 678 300 58 TDA440
The line deflection is realized with thyristor tech and the frame deflection is an usual output WITH TDA1170 IC
TDA1170  vertical deflection FRAME DEFLECTION INTEGRATED CIRCUITGENERAL DESCRIPTION f The TDA1170 and TDA1270 are monolithic integratedcircuits designed for use in TV vertical deflection systems. They are manufactured using
the Fairchild Planar* process.
Both devices are supplied in the 12-pin plastic power package with the heat sink fins bent
for insertion into the printed circuit board.
The TDA1170 is designed primarily for large and small screen black and white TV
receivers and industrial TV monitors. The TDA1270 is designed primarily for driving
complementary vertical deflection output stages in color TV receivers and industrial
monitors.
APPLICATION INFORMATION (TDA1170)
The vertical oscillator is directly synchronized by the sync pulses (positive or negative); therefore its free
running frequency must be lower than the sync frequency. The use of current feedback causes the yoke
current to be independent of yoke resistance variations due to thermal effects, Therefore no thermistor is
required in series with the yoke. The flyback generator applies a voltage, about twice the supply voltage, to
the yoke. This produces a short flyback time together with a high useful power to dissipated power
HOW THYRISTOR LINE DEFLECTION OUTPUT SCAN  STAGES WORK:
INTRODUCTION:
The massive demand for colour television receivers in Europe/Germany 
in the 70's  brought about an influx of sets from the continent. Many of
 these use the thin -neck (29mm) type of 110° shadowmask tube and the 
Philips 20AX CRT Tube, plus the already Delta Gun CRT . 
Scanning
 of these tubes is accomplished by means of a toroidally wound 
deflection yoke (conventional 90° and thick -neck 110° tubes operate 
with 
saddle -wound deflection coils). The inductance of a toroidal yoke is 
very much less than that of a saddle -wound yoke, thus higher scan currents are required.
 The deflection current necessary for the line scan is about 12A peak 
-to -peak. This could be provided by a transistor line output stage but a
 current step-up transformer, which is bulky and both difficult and 
costly to manufacture, would be required. 
An entirely different 
approach, pioneered by RCA in America and developed by them and by ITT 
(SEL) in Germany, is the thyristor line output stage. In this system the 
scanning current is provided via two thyristors and two switching diodes
 which due to their characteristics can supply the deflection yoke 
without a step-up transformer (a small transformer is still required to 
obtain the input voltage pulse for the e.h.t. tripler). The purpose of 
this article is to explain the basic operation of such circuits. The 
thyristor line output circuit offers high reliability since all 
switching occurs at zero current level. C.R.T. flashovers, which can 
produce high current surges (up to 60A), have no detrimental effects on 
the switching diodes or thyristors since the forward voltage drop across
 these devices is small and the duration of the current pulses short. If
 a surge limiting resistor is pro- vided in the tube's final anode 
circuit the peak voltages produced by flashovers seldom exceed the 
normal repetitive circuit voltages by more than 50-100V. This is well 
within the device ratings.
 Brief Basics: LINE Scan output stages operate on the same basic principle whether
 the active device used is a valve, transistor or thyristor. As a 
starting point, let's remind ourselves of this principle, which was 
first developed by Blumlein in 1932. The idea in its simplest form is 
shown in Fig. 1. The scan coils, together with a parallel tuning 
capacitor, are connected in series with a switch across the h.t. supply.
 When the switch is closed - (a) - current flows through the coils, 
building up linearly as required to deflect the beam from the centre to 
the right-hand side of the screen. At this point the switch is opened. 
The coils and the capacitor then form a resonant circuit. The magnetic 
fields generated around the coils during the preceeding forward scan as 
current flowed through them when the switch was closed now collapse, 
charging the capacitor - (b). As a result of the resonant action the 
capacitor next discharges, driving current through the coils in the 
opposite direction - (c). Once more magnetic fields are generated around
 the coils. This resonant action lasts for one half -cycle of 
oscillation, during which the beam is rapidly deflected from the right- 
hand side to the centre and then to the left-hand side of the screen. 
The flyback is thus complete. If the switch is now closed again further 
oscillation is prevented and, as the magnetic fields around the coils 
collapse, a decaying current flows through them in the direction shown 
at (d). This decaying current flow deflects the beam from the left-hand 
side of the screen back towards the centre: the period during which this
 occurs is often referred to as the energy recovery part of the scanning
 cycle. When the current has decayed to zero we are back at the 
situation shown at (a): the current through the coils reverses, driving 
the beam to the right-hand side of the screen. This is a very efficient 
System, since most of the energy drawn from the supply is subsequently 
returned to it. There is negligible resistance in the circuit, so there 
is very little power loss.
 Basic Transistor Circuit:
 In
 Blumlein's day valves had to be used to perform the switching action. 
Two were required since a valve is a unidirectional device, and as we 
have seen current must flow through the switch in both directions. 
Nowadays we generally use a transistor to perform the switching action, 
arranging the circuit along the lines shown in Fig. 2. The line output 
transformer T is used as a load for the transistor and as a simple means
 of generating the e.h.t. and other supplies required by the receiver. 
The scan -correction capacitor Cs also serves as a d.c. block. Capacitor
 Ct tunes the coils during the flyback when the transistor is cut off. 
During the forward scan Cs first charges, then discharges, via the scan 
coils, thus providing deflection from the left- hand side to the 
right-hand side of the screen. One advantage of a transistor is that it 
can conduct in either direction. Thus unless we are operating the stage 
from an 1.t. line of around 11V - as in the case of many small -screen 
portables - we don't need a second switching device. With a supply of 
11-12V a shunt efficiency diode - connected in parallel with the 
transistor, cathode to collector and anode to emitter, is required 
because the linearity is otherwise unacceptable. Another advantage of a 
transistor compared to a valve is that it is a much more efficient 
switch. When a transistor is saturated both its junctions are forward 
biased and its collector voltage is then at little more than chassis 
potential. The anode voltage of a saturated pentode however is measured 
in tens of volts, and this means that there is considerable wasteful 
dissipation. Thyristor Switch If what we need is an efficient switch, 
why not use a thyristor??? 
Thyristors
 are even more efficient switches than transistors. They are more 
rugged, can pass heavy currents, and are insensitive to the voltage 
overloads that can kill off transistors. In addition, in the sort of 
circuit we are about to lo
ok
 at the power supply requirements can be simplified (a line output 
transistor must be operated in conjunction with a stabilised power 
supply: this is not necessary in the thyristor circuit since regulation 
can be built in). In the nature of things however there must be 
disadvantages as well - and there are! First, a thyristor will not act 
as a bidirectional switch. 
ok
 at the power supply requirements can be simplified (a line output 
transistor must be operated in conjunction with a stabilised power 
supply: this is not necessary in the thyristor circuit since regulation 
can be built in). In the nature of things however there must be 
disadvantages as well - and there are! First, a thyristor will not act 
as a bidirectional switch. 
There
 is no great problem here however: all we need do is to shunt it with a 
parallel efficiency diode. More awkward is the fact that once a  
thyristor has been triggered on at its gate it cannot be switched off 
again by any further action taken in its gate circuit. In fact it's this
 problem of operating the thyristor switch that is responsible for the 
complexity of thyristor line output circuits. 
A
 thyristor can be switched off only by reducing the current through it 
below the "hold on" value, either by momentarily removing the voltage 
across the device or by passing an opposing current through it in the 
opposite direction - this latter technique is used in practical 
thyristor line output circuits. Once the reverse current through the 
thyristor is about equal to the forward current flowing through it the 
net current falls below the "hold on" value and the thyristor switches 
off.
 Basic Thyristor Circuit:
 There
 is more than one way of arranging a thyristor line output stage. Only 
one basic circuit has been used so far however, though as you'd expect 
there are differences in detail in the circuits used by different 
setmakers. The basic circuit was first devised and put into production 
by RCA in the USA in the late 1960s. It was subsequently popularised in 
Europe by ITT, and many continental setmakers have used it, mainly in 
colour receiver chassis fitted with 110° delta gun c.r.t.s. They include
 Finlux, Grundig, Saba, Siemens and ASA. Korting use it in their 55636 
chassis which is fitted with a 90° PIL tube, while Grundig continue to 
use it in their latest sets which use the Mullard/Philips 20AX tube. 
Amongst Japanese setmakers, Sharp use it in their Model C1831H which is fitted with a Toshiba RIS tube. 
Reduced
 to its barest essentials, the circuit takes the form shown in Fig. 3. 
To start with this looks strange indeed! The right-hand side however is 
simply the equivalent of the scanning section of the transistor circuit 
shown in Fig. 2, with TH2 and D2 replacing the transistor as the 
bidirectional switch.  
The
 tuning capacitor however is returned to chassis via the left-hand side 
of the circuit - in consequence there is no d.c. path between the 
right-hand and left-hand sides of the circuit. L1 provides a load. The 
efficiency diode D2 conducts during the first part of the forward scan, 
after which TH2 is switched on to drive the beam towards the right-hand 
side of the screen. The purpose of the left-hand side of the circuit, 
the bidirectional switch TH1/D1 and L2, together with the tuning 
capacitor Ct, is to switch TH2 off and to provide the flyback action.
 The
 output from the line oscillator consists  of a brief pulse to initiate 
the flyback. It occurs just before the flyback time (roughly 3µS before)
 and is applied to the gate of TH1, switching it on. When this happens 
L2 is connected to chassis and current flows into it, discharging Ct 
(previously charged from the h.t. line). L2 is called the commutating 
coil, and forms a resonant circuit with Ct. Thus when TH1 is switched on
 a sudden pulse builds up and this is used to switch off TH2. In 
addition to tuning L2, Ct tunes the scan coils to provide the usual 
flyback action. 
Roughly
 speaking therefore D2 and TH2 conduct alternately during the forward 
scan and are cut off during the flyback, while TH1 is triggered on just 
before the flyback, TH1 and D I subsequently conducting alternately 
during the flyback and then cutting off when the efficiency diode takes 
over.  
 Thyristor Line Scan Practical Circuit:
 A
 more practical arrangement is shown in Fig. 4. A secondary winding L3 
is added to Ll to provide the trigger pulse for TH2: L4, C4 and R I 
provide the pulse shaping required. The tuning capacitor Ct is 
rearranged as a T network: this is done to reduce the voltage across the
 individual capacitors and enable smaller values to be used, all in the 
interests of economy. And finally a transformer is coupled to the 
circuit by C5 to make use of the flyback pulse for e.h.t. generation and
 to provide other supplies. In many recent chassis THUD 1 and TH2/D2 are
 encapsu- lated together, in pairs. In practical circuits L1 and L2 
generally consist of a single transformer - often a transductor is used,
 for convenience rather than for the transductor characteristics. This 
makes practical circuits look at first glance rather different to the 
basic form shown in Figs. 3 and 4. A further winding is often added to 
the transformer to provide a supply for other parts of the receiver, 
making the circuit look even more confusing. In addition e.h.t. 
regulation, pincushion distortion correction and beam limiting circuitry
 is required, and protection circuits may be incorporated.
Scanning Sequence: 
 It's time to look at the basic scanning sequence in more detail, basing
 the description on Figs. 3 and 4. We'll start at the beginning of the 
flyback. TH2 and D2 have just been switched off - we'll come to how this
 is done later - while  TH1 which was triggered on by a pulse from the
 line oscillator is still conducting. Energy is stored in the scan coils
 in the form of magnetic fields. As these collapse, a decaying current 
flows via the coils, Cs, Ct, L2 and TH 1. When this current falls to 
zero the charge on Ct will have reversed and TH 1 will switch off. This 
completes the first half of the flyback. The left-hand plate of Ct is 
charged negatively, while its right-hand plate carries a positive 
charge. D1 is now biased on and Ct discharges back into the scan coils 
to give the second half of the flyback. Current is flowing via D1, L2, 
Ct, Cs and the scan coils. At the end of this period the circuit energy 
will have been transferred once again to the scan coils - in the form of
 magnetic fields. One complete half cycle of oscillation will have 
occurred, returning the beam to the left-hand side of the screen. With 
Ct discharged, D 1 switches off. The oscillation tries to continue in 
the negative direction, but we then get the normal efficiency diode 
action, i.e. D2 conducts shorting out the tuned circuit. As the fields 
around the coils collapse a linearly decaying current flows via the 
coils, Cs and D2. This gives us the first part of the forward scan. 
Towards the centre of the screen TH2 is switched on by the pulse 
obtained from L3 and the current in the scan coils reverses to complete 
the scan.  
 Switching the Scan Thyristor Off:  The
 tricky part is when it comes to switching TH2 off. As we have seen, TH1
 is triggered on about 3fitS before the end of the forward scan. Prior 
to this Ct will have been charged to the h.t. potential via L 1 and L2. 
When TH1 conducts, current flows via TH1, L2, Ct and TH2 (which is on 
remember). Because of the tuned circuit formed by L2 and Ct, the current
 builds up rapidly in the form of a pulse - the commutating pulse shown 
in Fig. 5. When this current, which flows through TH2 in the opposite 
direction to the scan current, exceeds the scan current TH2 switches 
off. Once TH2 cuts off D2 is able to conduct - it is no longer reverse 
biased - which it does for a short period to provide an earth return 
path for the remaining duration of the commutating pulse and also to 
enable the scan to be completed (Cs discharging via the scan coils). 
When the reverse, commutating current falls below the scan current D2 
switches off and we then get the flyback action as the magnetic fields 
around the coils collapse.
 Power Transferring ; during the forward scan Ct is charged via L1 and L2, its right-hand plate being held at little above 
 through
 the conduction of D2 and then TH2. During the flyback, when TH1 and D1 
conduct alternately, connecting the junction L1, L2 to chassis, Ct 
supplies energy to the scan part of the circuit. The Practical Circuit 
so much then for the basic circuit and its action. Turning now to a 
practical circuit, Fig. 6 shows the thyristor line output stage used in 
the Grundig SuperColor  Models 5011 and 6011. Ty511/Di511 form the 
flyback switch, T1 is the input/commutating transformer, C516/7/8 
comprise the tuning capacitance, Di518 is the efficiency diode and Ty518
 the forward scan thyristor. The scan -correction capacitor Cs is C537. 
As can be seen, the line output transformer circuit is quite 
conventional. The main complication arises because of the need to 
provide width/e.h.t. stabilisation. In a valve line output stage it is a
 simple matter to achieve stabilisation by using a v.d.r. in a feedback 
circuit to alter the bias on the output pentode. We can't do this with a
 transistor line output stage, so we have to operate this in conjunction
 with a stabilised supply. There is a subtle but quite simple method of 
applying stabilisation to a thyristor line output stage however. As we 
have seen, the energy supplied to the output side of the circuit is 
provided by the tuning capacitors when they discharge during the flyback
 period. During the forward scan they charge via the input coil - or 
transformer as it is in practice. Now if we shunt the transformer's 
input winding with a transductor we can control the inductance in series
 with the tuning capacitors and in consequence the charging time of the 
capacitors and hence the power supplied to the output side of the 
circuit.
EHT/Width Stabilisation: 
 The
 stabilising transductor in Fig. 6 is Td 1, whose load windings are 
connected in series with R504/Di504 across the input winding of T1. The 
transductor's control winding is driven by transistor Tr506, which 
senses the h.t. voltage (via R506) and the amplitude of the signal at 
tag d on the line output transformer. R508 in the transistor's base 
circuit enables the e.h.t. to be set to the correct voltage (25kV). 
Other Circuit Details:
 A fourth winding on Ti feeds the 1.t. rectifier and stabiliser which 
provide the supply for the low -power circuits in the receiver. The 
trigger pulse winding also feeds a stabilised 1.t. supply circuit 
(21V). 
EW
 pincushion distortion correction is applied by connecting the load 
windings of a second transductor (Td2) across a section of the line 
output
 transformer's primary winding. By feeding a field frequency waveform to
 the control winding on this transductor the line scanning is modulated 
at field frequency. There is a simple but effective safety circuit in 
this Grundig line output stage. If the voltage at tag c on the line 
output transformer rises above 68V zener diode Di514 conducts, 
triggering thyristor Ty511 into conduction with the result that the 
cut-out operates. C517 is returned to chassis via a damped coil (L517) 
so that the voltage transient when the efficiency diode cuts off is 
attenuated. Likewise L512/C512/R512 are added to suppress the voltage 
transient when the flyback thyristor Ty511 cuts off. The balancing coil 
L516 is included to remove unwanted voltage spikes produced by the 
thyristors. 
 transformer's primary winding. By feeding a field frequency waveform to
 the control winding on this transductor the line scanning is modulated 
at field frequency. There is a simple but effective safety circuit in 
this Grundig line output stage. If the voltage at tag c on the line 
output transformer rises above 68V zener diode Di514 conducts, 
triggering thyristor Ty511 into conduction with the result that the 
cut-out operates. C517 is returned to chassis via a damped coil (L517) 
so that the voltage transient when the efficiency diode cuts off is 
attenuated. Likewise L512/C512/R512 are added to suppress the voltage 
transient when the flyback thyristor Ty511 cuts off. The balancing coil 
L516 is included to remove unwanted voltage spikes produced by the 
thyristors. 
At
 the end........This Grundig circuit is representative of the way in 
which thyristor line output circuits are used in practice. There are 
differences in detail in the thyristor line output stages found in other
 setmakers' chassis, but the basic arrangement will be found to be 
substantially 
Servicing / Throubleshooting / Repairing Thyristor Line Scan Timebases Crt Deflections circuits:
LARGELY
 due to advances in colour c.r.t. scan coil design, the thyristor line 
output stage has become obsolete laready in the 1981's.
 It 
 was a very good system to use where the line scan coils require large 
peak currents with only a moderate flyback voltage - an intrinsic 
characteristic of toroidally wound deflection coils. 
it was originally devised by RCA. Many sets fitted with 
110°, narrow -neck delta -gun tubes used a thyristor line output stage -
 for example those in the Grundig and Saba ranges and the Finlux Peacock
 , Indesit, Siemens, Salora, Metz, Nordmende, Blaupunkt, ITT, Seleco, 
REX, Mivar, Emerson, Brionvega, Loewe, Galaxi, Stern, Zanussi, Wega, 
Philco. The circuit continued to find favour in earlier chassis designed
 for use with in -line gun tubes, examples being found in the Grundig 
and Korting ranges - also,  Indesit, Siemens, Salora, Metz, Nordmende, 
Blaupunkt, ITT, Seleco, REX, Mivar, Emerson, Brionvega, Loewe, Galaxi, 
Stern, Zanussi, Wega, Philco the Rediffusion Mk. III chassis. Deflection
 currents of up to 13A peak -to -peak are commonly encountered with 110°
 tubes, with a flyback voltage of only some 600V peak  to peak. The 
total energy requirement is of the order of 6mJ, which is 50 per cent 
higher than modern 110° tubes of the 30AX and S4 variety with their 
saddle -wound line scan coils.   The only problem with this type of 
circuit is the large amount of energy that shuttles back and forth at 
line frequency. This places a heavy stress on certain components. 
Circuit losses produce quite high temperatures, which are concentrated 
at certain points, in particular the commutating combi coil. This leads 
to deterioration of the soldered joints around the coil, a common cause 
of failure. This can have
 a cumulative effect, a high resistance joint increasing the local 
heating until the joint becomes well and truly dry -a classic symptom 
with some Grundig / Emerson sets. The wound components themselves can be
 a source of trouble, due to losses - particularly the combi coil and 
the regulating transductor. Later chassis are less prone to this sort of
 thing, partly because of the use of later generation, higher efficiency
 yokes but mainly due to more generous and better design of the wound 
components. The ideal dielectric for use in the tuning capacitors is 
polypropylene (either metalised or film). It's a truly won- derful 
dielectric - very stable, with very small losses, and capable of 
operation at high frequencies and elevated temperatures. It's also 
nowadays reasonably inexpensive. Unfortunately many earlier chassis of 
thi
s type used polyester capacitors, and it's no surprise that they were
 inclined to give up. When replacing the tuning capacitors in a 
thyristor line output stage it's essential to use polypropylene types -a
 good range of axial components with values ranging from 0.001µF to 
047µF is available from RS Components, enabling even non-standard values
 to be made up from an appropriate combination. Using polypropylene 
capacitors in place of polyester ones will not only ensure capacitor 
reliability but will also lower the stress on other components by 
reducing the circuit losses (and hence power consumption).
s type used polyester capacitors, and it's no surprise that they were
 inclined to give up. When replacing the tuning capacitors in a 
thyristor line output stage it's essential to use polypropylene types -a
 good range of axial components with values ranging from 0.001µF to 
047µF is available from RS Components, enabling even non-standard values
 to be made up from an appropriate combination. Using polypropylene 
capacitors in place of polyester ones will not only ensure capacitor 
reliability but will also lower the stress on other components by 
reducing the circuit losses (and hence power consumption).
       Numerous circuit designs for completely transistorized television 
receivers either have been incorporated in commercially available 
receivers or have been described in detail in various technical 
publications. One of the most troublesome areas in such transistor 
receivers, from the point of View of reliability and economy, lies in 
the horizontal deflection circuits.
       As an attempt to avoid the voltage and current limitations of transistor 
deflection circuits, a number of circuits have been proposed utilizing 
the silicon controlled rectifier (SCR), a semiconductor device capable 
of handling substantially higher currents and voltages than transistors.
       The circuit utilizes two bi-directionally conductive switching means 
which serve respectively as trace and commutating switches. 
Particularly, each of the switching means comprises the parallel 
combination of a silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) and a diode. The 
commutating switch is triggered on shortly before the desired beginning
 of retrace and, in conjunction with a resonant commutating circuit 
having an inductor and two capacitors, serves to turn off the trace 
switch to initiate retrace. The commutating circuit is also arranged to 
turn oft the commutating SCR before the end of retrace.  
Circuit Operation:
The
 basic thyristor line output stage arrangement used in all these chassis
 is shown in Fig. 1 - it was originally devised by RCA. The part to th
e
 right of the tuning capacitance acts in exactly the same manner as a 
transis- tor line output stage, with the scan thyristor Th2 replacing 
the transistor. The thyristor is switched on about half way through the 
forward scan, the efficiency diode D2 provid- ing the initial part of 
the line scan (left-hand side of the screen). The scan coils and line 
output transformer (used to generate the e.h.t. plus various other 
supply lines and pulse waveforms as required) are a.c. coupled, via the 
scan -correction capacitor C5 and C6 respectively. The problem with a 
thyristor is that it can be turned on at its gate but not off. To switch
 a thyristor off, the current flowing through it must be reduced below a
 value known as the hold -on current. This is the main function of the 
components on the left-hand side - the line generator, the flyback 
thyristor with its parallel diode and the commutat- ing coil. During the
 forward scan, the tuning capacitors are charged from the h.t. line via 
the input and commutat- ing coils. The line generator produces a pulse 
to trigger the flyback thyristor Th1- this occurs just before the actual
 flyback. When Thl1 switches on, the junction of the  input coil and the
 commutating coil is momentarily con- nected to chassis. The tuning 
capacitance and the com- mutating coil then resonate, producing a pulse 
which draws current via the scan thyristor. Since this current flow is 
in the opposite direction to the scan current flow, the two cancel and 
the current flowing via the scan thyris- tor falls below the hold -on 
current. Th2 is thus switched off, and the scan coils resonate with the 
tuning capaci- tance to provide the flyback action. So much for the 
basic action. A secondary winding coupled to the input coil produces a 
pulse to switch the scan thyristor on, in conjunction with the 
shaping/delay network Ll, C4, R1. The tuning capacitors are usually 
arranged in the T formation shown to reduce the values required and the 
voltages developed across them. In practical circuits the input 
and commutating coils are usually combined in a single unit which for 
obvious reasons is generally known as the combi coil. The main point not
 so far mentioned is stabilisation. There are two approaches to this. In
 earlier circuits a transductor was included in parallel with the 
input
 coil to vary the impe- dance in series with the tuning capacitance. 
This was driven by a transistor which was in turn controlled by feedback
 from the line output transformer. A more efficient technique is used in
 later circuits, with a current dumping thyristor in series with the 
input coil. Practical Circuit As a typical example of the earlier type 
of circuit, Fig. 2 shows the thyristor line output stage used in the 
Grundig 5010/5011/6010/6011 series. Td1 is the regulating transductor 
which is driven by Tr506. Ty511 is the flyback thyristor (commutating 
thyristor might be a better name), Ty518 the scan thyristor, Di518 the 
efficiency diode and C516/7/8 the tuning capacitance. The scan coils are
 cou- pled via C537, while C532 provides coupling between the primary 
winding of the line output transformer and chas- sis. A transductor 
(Td2) is used for EW raster correction. The combi coil also feeds 1.t. 
rectifiers from its secondary windings. 
e
 right of the tuning capacitance acts in exactly the same manner as a 
transis- tor line output stage, with the scan thyristor Th2 replacing 
the transistor. The thyristor is switched on about half way through the 
forward scan, the efficiency diode D2 provid- ing the initial part of 
the line scan (left-hand side of the screen). The scan coils and line 
output transformer (used to generate the e.h.t. plus various other 
supply lines and pulse waveforms as required) are a.c. coupled, via the 
scan -correction capacitor C5 and C6 respectively. The problem with a 
thyristor is that it can be turned on at its gate but not off. To switch
 a thyristor off, the current flowing through it must be reduced below a
 value known as the hold -on current. This is the main function of the 
components on the left-hand side - the line generator, the flyback 
thyristor with its parallel diode and the commutat- ing coil. During the
 forward scan, the tuning capacitors are charged from the h.t. line via 
the input and commutat- ing coils. The line generator produces a pulse 
to trigger the flyback thyristor Th1- this occurs just before the actual
 flyback. When Thl1 switches on, the junction of the  input coil and the
 commutating coil is momentarily con- nected to chassis. The tuning 
capacitance and the com- mutating coil then resonate, producing a pulse 
which draws current via the scan thyristor. Since this current flow is 
in the opposite direction to the scan current flow, the two cancel and 
the current flowing via the scan thyris- tor falls below the hold -on 
current. Th2 is thus switched off, and the scan coils resonate with the 
tuning capaci- tance to provide the flyback action. So much for the 
basic action. A secondary winding coupled to the input coil produces a 
pulse to switch the scan thyristor on, in conjunction with the 
shaping/delay network Ll, C4, R1. The tuning capacitors are usually 
arranged in the T formation shown to reduce the values required and the 
voltages developed across them. In practical circuits the input 
and commutating coils are usually combined in a single unit which for 
obvious reasons is generally known as the combi coil. The main point not
 so far mentioned is stabilisation. There are two approaches to this. In
 earlier circuits a transductor was included in parallel with the 
input
 coil to vary the impe- dance in series with the tuning capacitance. 
This was driven by a transistor which was in turn controlled by feedback
 from the line output transformer. A more efficient technique is used in
 later circuits, with a current dumping thyristor in series with the 
input coil. Practical Circuit As a typical example of the earlier type 
of circuit, Fig. 2 shows the thyristor line output stage used in the 
Grundig 5010/5011/6010/6011 series. Td1 is the regulating transductor 
which is driven by Tr506. Ty511 is the flyback thyristor (commutating 
thyristor might be a better name), Ty518 the scan thyristor, Di518 the 
efficiency diode and C516/7/8 the tuning capacitance. The scan coils are
 cou- pled via C537, while C532 provides coupling between the primary 
winding of the line output transformer and chas- sis. A transductor 
(Td2) is used for EW raster correction. The combi coil also feeds 1.t. 
rectifiers from its secondary windings. 
Component Problems: The only problem with this type of circuit is the large amount of energy that shuttles back and forth at line frequency.
 This places a heavy stress on certain components. Circuit losses 
produce quite high temperatures, which are concentrated at certain 
points, in particular the combi coil. This leads to deterioration of the
 soldered joints around the coil, a common cause of failure. This can 
have a cumulative effect, a high -resistance joint increasing the local 
heating until the joint becomes well and truly dry -a classic symptom 
with some Grundig sets. The wound components themselves can be a source 
of trouble, due to losses - particularly the combi coil and the 
regulating transductor. Later chassis are less prone to this sort of 
thing, partly because of the use of later generation, higher efficiency 
yokes but mainly due to more generous and better design of the wound 
components. The ideal dielectric for use in the tuning capacitors is 
polypropylene (either metalised or film). It's a truly won- derful 
dielectric - very stable, with very small losses, and capable of 
operation at high frequencies and elevated temperatures. It's also 
nowadays reasonably inexpensive. Unfortunately many earlier chassis of 
this type used polyester capacitors, and it's no surprise that they were
 inclined to give up. When replacing the tuning capacitors in a 
thyristor line output stage it's essential to use poly- propylene types 
-a good range of axial components with values ranging from 0.001µF to 
047µF is available from RS Components, enabling even non-standard values
 to be made up from an appropriate combination. Using polypropylene 
capacitors in place of polyester ones will not only ensure capacitor 
reliability but will 
also
 lower the stress on other components by reducing the circuit losses 
(and hence power consumption). The thyristors are also liable to fail, 
as are their parallel diodes. Earlier devices were less reliable than 
their successors. Since all thyristor line output stages operate in the 
same way and under similar conditions, the use of later types of 
thyristors and diodes in earlier circuits is a matter of mechanical 
rather than electrical con- siderations. One important point should be 
noted: the scan thyristor is a faster device and often has a higher 
voltage rating than the flyback thyristor. The simplest course is to 
keep in stock some of the later scan thyristors that incorporate an 
efficiency diode - suitable types are the RCA S3900SF and the Telefunken
 TD3-800H. The Telefunken device is in a TO66 package (and can be 
obtained quite cheaply) while the RCA type is in a TO220 package. Either
 type can be used in the scan or flyback positions and can also be used 
as a replacement for the regulating thyristor used in later designs 
instead of a transductor. Whenever replacing a thyristor in the line 
output stage it's good practice to replace the parallel diode at the 
same time. Using one of the above recom- mended devices will do this 
automatically, since the thyristor and its parallel diode share the same
 encapsulation - always remember to remove the old diode when this is a 
separate device however, as some can exhibit high -voltage 
leakage/breakdown which is not evident from a quite check with the Avo. 
Apart from the wound components (including the line output transformer),
 the thyristors and their parallel diodes and the tuning capacitors 
several other com- ponents are prone to failure. These include the 
tripler, scan/flyback rectifier diodes used to provide various supply 
lines, surge limiting resistors, the scan coil coup- ling/scan 
correction capacitor (replace with a metalised polypropylene type) and 
regulator components such as the thyristor in later types and the 
transductor driver transistor in earlier circuits. 
Basic Fault Conditions: At
 one time every engineer must have scratched his head and cursed the 
new-fangled idea of the thyristor line output stage. That they are 
awkward to service is a fallacy however. The usual symptom of a fault in
 the line output stage is the cutout tripping. All chassis that use a 
thyristor line timebase incorporate a trip of some sort. The type varies
 from chassis to chassis. Early Grundig sets have a mechanical cutout; 
the Saba H chassis uses a thyristor and solenoid to open the mains 
on/off switch; a common arrangement consists of a thyristor in series 
with the h.t, line and a control transistor which shorts the thyristor's
 gate and cathode in the event of excessive current demand (this gives 
audible tripping at about 2Hz). Some sets incorporate both excess 
current and over -voltage trips, but most have just the former. 
There
 are two basic fault conditions: when the excess current trip is 
activated and the set goes dead, or no e.h.t. with the trip not 
activated. The first condition is usually due to a line timebase fault, 
the most common being a short-circuit flyback thyristor or its parallel 
diode. A straightforward resistance check will sort this out. If this is
 not the case, short-circuit the scan thyristor by soldering a wire link
 between its anode and cathode. This will prevent any drive to the scan 
coils and the line output transformer. If the tripping stops, the fault 
could be due to the tripler, the line output transformer, a rectifier 
diode fed from a winding on the latter or a short in a circuit supplied 
by a scan rectifier diode. If the trip continues to operate and the 
flyback thyristor/diode is not the culprit, the most likely causes are 
incorrect drive to this thyristor - if possible check with a scope 
against the waveform given in the manual - or a rectifier diode fed from
 the combi coil. As an example of the latter, Fig. 3 shows the 
arrangement used in the Finlux Peacock: the electronic trip will operate
 if either D503 or D504 goes short-circuit, a fairly common fault on 
these sets. The diodes can also go open-circuit/high resistance to give 
the no sound with field collapse symp- tom, but that's another story ( 
referring to the diodes as D603/4 ). When the set is dead, h.t. is 
present and the trip is not activated, suspect the following: the scan 
thyristor, the efficiency diode, the line output transformer, the scan -
 correction capacitor, or lack of drive to the scan thyristor. Dry 
-joints can be the cause of any of these basic fault conditions, 
depending on the actual circuit and where the dry -joint has occurred. 
 The usual symptom is fuzzy verticals and a sawtooth effect on 
diagonals. The trip may operate, possibly after period of operation. 
These components set up the transductor's operating bias. Linearity 
problems are usually caused by the regulator circuit, which can also be 
responsible for line "hunting". In the event of lack of width in the 
earlier type of circuit, check for dry -joints in the regulator circuit 
and suspect the control transistor. Foldover on the left-hand side of 
the screen can be caused by an open -circuit flyback diode. Foldover at 
the centre of the screen with greatly reduced width is the symptom when 
the efficiency diode goes open -circuit - the trip may or may not 
operate. Unusual interference patterns on the screen, best viewed with 
the contrast control turned to minimum and the brightness control 
advanced until a distinctly visible but not over bright white raster is 
obtained, can be due to the tripler if there's curved patterning on the 
extreme left- hand side of the screen, the regulator clamp diode (Di505 
in Fig. 2) if there's curved interference just to the left of centre, or
 the flyback thyristor drive circuit if there's a single vertical line 
of patterning about four fifths of the way to the right of the screen.The aim of this article has been to provide a general guide to servicing rather than to list faults common to particular models. Much useful information on individual
chassis with thyristor line output stages has appeared in previous issues of Obsolete Technology Tellye !- refer to the following as required: Search with the tag Thyristors at the bottom of the post to select all posts with this argument on various fabricants.
CHASSIS B1560-1 (396504610 ) LINE DEFLECTION WITH THYRISTOR SWITCH TECHNOLOGY OVERVIEW.
Electron beam deflection circuit including thyristors Further Discussion and deepening of knowledge, Thyristor horizontal output circuits:
 1. An electron beam deflection circuit for a cathode ray tube with   electromagnetic deflection by means of a sawtooth current waveform   having a trace portion and a retrace portion, said circuit comprising: a   deflection winding; a first source of electrical energy formed by a   first capacitor; first controllable switching means comprising a   parallel combination of a first thyristor and a first diode connected   together to conduct in opposite directions, for connecting said winding   to said first source during said trace portion, while said first   switching means is turned on; a second source of electrical energy   including a first inductive energy storage means coupled to a voltage   supply; reactive circuit means including a combination of inductive and   capacitive reactances for storing the energy supplied by said second   source; second controllable switching means, substantially similar to   said first one, for completing a circuit including said reactive circuit   means and said first switching means, when turned on before the end of   said trace portion, so as to pass through said first switching means  an  oscillatory current in opposite direction to that which passes  through  said first thyristor from said first source and to turn said  first  thyristor off after these two currents cancel out, the  oscillatory  current flowing thereafter through said first diode for an  interval  termed the circuit turn-off time, which has to be greater than  the  turn-off time of said first thyristor; wherein the improvement   comprises: means for drawing, during at least a part of said trace   portion, a substantial amount of additional current through said first   switching means, in the direction of conduction of said first diode,   whereby to perceptibly shift the waveform of the current flowing through   said first switching means towards the negative values by an amount   equal to that of said substantial additional current and to lengthen, in   proportion thereto, said circuit turn-off time, without altering the   values of the reactances in the reactive circuit which intervene in the   determination of both the circuit turn-off and retrace portion time   intervals.
2. A deflection circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein said amount of additional current is greater than or equal to 5 per cent of the peak-to-peak value of the current flowing through the deflection winding.
3. A deflection circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein said means for drawing a substantial amount of additional current through said first switching means comprises a resistor connected in parallel to said first capacitor.
4. A deflection circuit as claimed in claim 1, wherein said means for drawing an additional current is formed by connecting said first and second energy sources in series so that the current charging said reactive circuit means forms the said additional current.
 5. A deflection circuit as claimed in claim 1, further including a   series combination of an autotransformer winding and a second high-value   capacitor, said combination being connected in parallel to said first   switching means, wherein said autotransformer comprises an intermediate   tap located between its terminals respectively connected to said first   switching means and to said second capacitor, said tap delivering,   during said trace portion, a suitable DC supply voltage lower than the   voltage across said second capacitor; and wherein said means for drawing   a substantial amount of additional current comprises a load to be fed   by said supply voltage and having one terminal connected to ground; and   further controllable switching means controlled to conduct during at   least part of said trace portion and to remain cut off during said   retrace portion, said further switching means being connected between   said tap and the other terminal of said load.
Description:
The present invention relates to electron beam deflection circuits   including thyristors, such as silicon controlled rectifiers and relates,   in particular, to horizontal deflection circuits for television   receivers.
The   present invention constitutes an improvement in the circuit described   in U.S. Pat. No. 3,449,623 filed on Sept. 6, 1966, this circuit being   described in greater detail below with reference to FIGS. 1 and 2 of the   accompanying drawings. A deflection circuit of this type comprises a   first thyristor switch which allows the conenction of the horizontal   deflection winding to a constant voltage source during the time interval   used for the transmisstion of the picture signal and for applying this   signal to the grid of the cathode ray tube (this interval will be  termed  the "trace portion" of the scan), and a second thyristor switch  which  provides the forced commutation of the first one by applying to  it a  reverse current of equal amplitude to that which passes through it  from  the said voltage source and thus to initiate the retrace during  the  horizontal blanking interval.
A undirectional reverse blocking triode type thyristor or silicon controlled rectifier (SCR), such as that used in the aformentioned circuit, requires a certain turn-off time between the instant at which the anode current ceases and the instant at which a positive bias may be applied to it without turning it on, due to the fact that there is still a high concentration of free carriers in the vicinity of the middle junction, this concentration being reduced by a process of recombination independently from the reverse polarity applied to the thyristor. This turn-off time of the thyristor is a function of a number of parameters such as the junction temperature, the DC current level, the decay time of the direct current, the peak level of the reverse current applied, the amplitude of the reverse anode to cathode voltage, the external impedance of the gate electrode, and so on, certain of these varying considerably from one thyristor to another.
In   horizontal deflection circuits for television receivers, the flyback  or  retrace time is limited to approximately 20 percent of the  horizontal  scan period, the retrace time being in the case of the CCIR  standard of  625 lines, approximately 12 microseconds and, in the case  of the French  standard of 819 lines, approximately 9 microseconds.  During this  relatively short interval, the thyristor has to be rendered   non-conducting and the electron beam has to be returned to the origin  of  the scan. The first thyristor is blocked by means of a series  resonant  LC circuit which is subject to a certain number of  restrictions  (limitations as to the component values employed) due to  the fact that,  inter alia, it simultaneously determines the turn-off  time of the  circuit which blocks the thyristor and it forms part of the  series  resonant circuit which is to carry out the retrace. To obtain  proper  operation of the deflection circuit of the aforementioned  Patent,  especially when used for the French standard of 819 lines per  image, the  values of the components used have to subject to very close  tolerances  (approximately 2%), which results in high costs.
The improved deflection circuit, object of the present invention, allows the lengthening of the turn-off time of the circuit for turning the scan thyristor off, without altering the values of the LC circuit, which are determined by other criteria, and without impairing the operation of the circuit.
According to the invention, there is  provided an  electron beam deflection circuit for a cathode ray tube  with  electromagentic deflection by means of a sawtooth current waveform   having a trace portion and a retrace portion, said circuit comprising:  a  deflection winding; a first source of electrical energy formed by a   first capacitor; first controllable switching means comprising a   parallel combination of a first thyristor and a first diode, connected   together to conduct in opposite directions, for connecting said winding   to said first source during said trace portion when said first  switching  means is turned on; a second source of electrical energy  including a  first inductive energy storage means coupled to a voltage  supply;  reactive circuit means including a combination of inductive   and capacitive reactances for storing the energy supplied by the said   second source; a second controllable switching means, substantially   identical with the first one, for completing a circuit including said   reactive circuit means and said first switching means, when turned on,   so as to pass through said first thyristor an oscillatory current in the   opposite direction to that which passes through it from said first   source and to turn it off after these two currents cancel out, the   oscillatory current then flowing through said first diode for an   interval termed the circuit turn-off time which has to be greater than   the turn-off time of said first thyristor; and means for drawing duing   at least a part of said trace portion a substantial amount of additional   current from said first switching means in the direction of conduction   of said first diode, whereby said circuit turn-off time is lengthened  in  proportion to the amount of said additional current, without  altering  the values of the reactances in the reactive circuit by  shifting the  waveform of the current flowing through said first  switching means  towards the negative by an amount equal to that of said  additional  current.
A further object of the invention consists in using the supplementary current in the recovery diode of the first switching means to produce a DC voltage which may be used as a power supply for the vertical deflection circuit of the television receiver, for example.
The invention will be better understood and other features and advantages thereof will become apparent from the following description and the accompanying drawings, given by way of example, and in which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic circuit diagram partially in bloc diagram form of a prior art deflection circuit according to the aforementioned Patent;
FIG. 2 shows waveforms of currents and voltages generated at various points in the circuit of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a deflection circuit according to the invention which allows the principle of the improvement to be explained;
FIG. 4 is a diagram of the waveforms of the current through the first switching means 4, 5 of the circuit of FIG. 3;
FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram of another embodiment of the circuit according to the invention;
FIG. 6 is a schematic representation of the preferred embodiment of the circuit according to the invention; and
FIG. 7 shows voltage waveforms at various points of the high voltage autotransformer 21 of FIG. 6.
In all these Figures the same reference numerals refer to the same components.
FIG.   1 shows the horizontal deflection circuit described and claimed in the   U.S. Pat. No. 3,449,623 mentioned above, which comprises a first  source  of electrical energy in the shape of a first capacitor 2 having a  high  capacitance C 2  for supplying a substantially constant voltage Uc 2    across its terminals. A first terminal of the first capacitor 2 is   connected to ground, whilst its second terminal which supplies a   positive voltage is connected to one of the terminals of a horizontal   deflection winding shown as a first inductance 1. A first switching   means 3, consisting of a first reverse blocking triode thyristor 4 (SCR)   and a first recovery diode 5 in parallel, the two being interconnected   to conduct current in opposite directions, is connected in parallel  with  the series combination formed by the deflection winding 1 and the  first  capacitor 2. The assembly of components 1, 2, 4 and 5 forms the  final  stage of the horizontal deflection circuit in a television  receiver  using electromagnetic delfection.
The deflection circuit also includes a drive stage for this final stage which here controls the turning off of the first thyristor 4 to produce the retrace or fly-back portion of the scan during the line-blanking intervals i.e. while the picture signal is not transmitted. This driver stage comprises a second voltage source in the shape of a DC power supply 6 which delivers a constant high voltage E. The negative terminal of the power supply 6 is connected to ground and its positive terminal to one of the terminals of a second inductance 7 of relatively high value, which draws a substantially lineraly varying current from the power supply 6 to avoid its overloading. The other terminal of the second inductance 7 is connected, on the one hand, to the junction of the deflection winding 1 and the first switching means 3 by means of a second inductance 8 and a second capacitor 9 in series and, on the other hand, to one of the terminals of a second controllable bi-directionally conducting switching means 10, similar to the first one 3, including a parallel combination of a second thyristor 11 and a second recovery diode 12 also arranged to conduct in opposite directions.
The respective values of the third inductance 8 (L 8 ) and of the second capacitor 9 (C 9 ) are principally selected so that, on the one hand, one half-cycle of oscillation o
f the first series resonant circuit L 8  - C 9 , (i.e. π √ L 8  .  C 9 )   is longer than the turn-off time of the first thyristor 4, but still  is  as short as possible since this time interval determines the speed  of  the commutation of the thyristor 4, and, on the other hand, one   half-cycle of oscillation of another series resonant circuit formed by L   1 , L 8  and C 9 , i.e. π √ (L 1  + L 8 ) .  C 9 , is substantially equal to the required retrace time interval (i.e. shorter than the horizontal blanking interval).
The gate (control electrode) of the second thyristor 11 is coupled to the output of the horizontal oscillator 13 of the television receiver by means of a first pulse transformer 14 and a first pulse shaping circuit 15 so that it is fed short triggering pulses which are to turn it on.
The gate of the first thyristor 4 fed with signals of a substantially rectangular waveform which are negative during the horizontal blanking intervals, is coupled to a winding 16 by means of a second pulse shaping circuit 17, the winding 16 being magnetically coupled to the second inductance 7 to make up the secondary winding of a transformer of which the inductance 7 forms the primary winding. It will be noted here that it is also possible to couple the secondary winding 16 magnetically to a primary winding connected to a suitable output (not shown) of the horizontal oscillator 13.
The operation of a circuit of this type will be explained below with reference to FIG. 2 which shows the waveforms at various points in the circuit of FIG. 1 during approximately one line period.
FIG. 2 is not to scale since one line period (t 7  - t 0 )   is equal to 64 microseconds in the case of 625 lines and 49   microseconds in the case of 819 lines, while the durations of the   respective horizontal blanking intervals are approximately 12 and 9.5   microseconds.
Waveform A shows the form of the current i L1 passing through deflection winding 1, this current having a sawtooth waveform substantially linear from t 0 to t 3 and from t 5 to t 7 , and crossing zero at time instants t 0 and t 7 , and reaching values of + I 1m and - I 1m , at time instants t 3 and t 5 respectively, these being its maximum positive and negative amplitudes.
During the second half of the trace portion of the horizontal deflection cycle, that is to say from t 0 to t 3 , the thyristor 4 of the first switching means 3 is conductive and makes the high value capacitor 2 discharge through the deflector winding 1, which has a high inductance, so that current i L1 increases linearly.
A few microseconds (5 to 8 μ s) before the end of the trace portion, i.e. at time instant t 1 , the trigger of the second thyristor 11 receives a short voltage pulse V G11    which causes it to turn on as its anode is at this instant at a   positive potential with respect to ground, which is due to the charging   of the second capacitor 9 through inductances 7 and 8 by the voltage E   from the power supply 6.
When thyristor 11 is made conductive at time t 1 , on the one hand, inductance 7 is connected between ground and the voltage source 6 and a linearly increasing current flows through it and, on the other hand, the reactive circuit 8, 9 forms a loop through the second and first switching means 10 and 3, thus forming a resonant circuit which draws an oscillatory current i 8 ,9 of frequency ##EQU1##
This oscillatory current i 8 ,9 will pass through the first switching means 3, i.e. thyristor 4 and diode 5, in the opposite direction to that of current i L1 . Since the frequency f 1 is high, current i 8 ,9 will increase more rapidly than i L1 and will reach the same level at time t 2 , that is to say i 8 ,9 (t 2 ) = -i L1 (t 2 ) and these currents will cancel out in the thyristor 4 in accordance with the well known principle of forced commutation. After time instant t 2 , current i 8 ,9 continues to increase more rapidly than i L1 , but the difference between them (i 8 ,9 - i L1 ) passes the diode 5 (see wave form B) until it becomes zero at time instant t 3 which is the turn off time instant of the first switching means 3, at which the retrace begins.
The interval between the time instant t 2 and t 3 , i.e. (t 3 -t 2 ), during which diode 5 is conductive and the thyristor is reverse biased will be termed in what follows the circuit turn-off time and it should be greater than the turn-off time of the thyristor 4 itself since the latter will subsequently become foward biased (i.e. from t 3 to t 5 ) by the retrace or flyback pulse (see waveform E) which should not trigger it.
At time instant t 3 , the switching means 3 is opened (i 4  and i 5    are both zero -- see waveforms B and C) and the reactive circuit 8, 9   forms a loop through capacitor 2 and the deflection coil 1 and thus a   series resonant circuit including (L 1  + L 8 ) and C 9 , C 2  being of high value and representing a short circuit for the flyback frequency ##EQU2## thus obtained.
The retrace which stated at time t 3 takes place during one half-cycle of the resonant circuit formed by reactances L 1 , L 8 and C 9 , i.e. during the interval between t 3 and t 5 . In the middle of this interval i.e. at time instant t 4 , both i L1 (waveform A) and i 8 ,9 (waveform D) pass through zero and change their sign, whereas the voltage at the terminals of the first switching means 3 (V 3 , waveform E) passes through a maximum. Thus, from t 4 onwards, thyristor 11 will be reverse biased and diode 12 will conduct the current from the resonant circuit 1, 8 and 9 in order to turn the second thyristor 11 off.
At time instant t 5 , when current i L1 has reached - I 1m and when voltage v 3 falls to zero, diode 5 of the first switching means 3 becomes conductive and the trace portion of scan begins.
Current i 8 ,9 nevertheless continues to flow in the resonant circuit 8, 9 through diodes 5 and 12, which causes a break to appear in waveform D at t 5 , and a negative peak to appear in waveform D and a positive one in waveform B in the interval between t 5 and t 6 , these being principally due to the distributed capacities of coil 1 or to an eventual capacitor (not shown) connected in parallel to the first switching means 3.
At time instant t 6 , diode 12 of the second switching means 10 ceases to conduct after having allowed thyristor 11 time to become turned off completely.
The level of current i 8 ,9 at time instant t 5 (i.e. I c ) as well as the negative peak I D12 in i 8 ,9 and the positive peak I D5 in i 5 depend on the values of L 8 and C 9 in the same way as does t
he turn-off time of the circuit (t 3  - t 2 ). If, for example, L 8  and C 9 , are increased I D5  increases towards zero and this could cause diode 5 to be cut off in an undesirable fashion. I c  also increases towards zero, which is liable to cause diode 12 to be blocked and thyristor 11 to trigger prematurely.
From the foregoing it can be clearly seen that the choice of values for L 8 and C 9 is subject to four limitations which prevent the values from being increased to lengthen the turn-off time of the driver circuit of first switching thyristor 4 so as to forestall its spurious triggering.
Waveform F shows the voltage v G4 obtained at the gate of thyristor 4 from the secondary winding 16 coupled to the inductor 7. This voltage is positive from t 0 to t 1 and from t 6 to t 7 and is negative between t 2 and t 6 i.e. while the second switching means 10 is conducting.
The present invention makes the lengthening of the turn-off time of thyristor 4 possible without altering the parameters of the circuit such as inductance 8 and capacitor 9.
In   the circuit shown in FIG. 3, which illustrates the principle of the   present invention, means are added to the circuit in FIG. 1 which enable   the turn-off time to be lengthened by connecting a load to diode 5 so   as to increase the current which flows through it during the time that   it is conductive. These means are here formed by a resistor 18  connected  in parallel with a capacitor 20 (which replaces capacitor 2)  which is  of a higher capacitance so that, in practice, it holds its  charge during  at least one half of the line period. FIG. 4, which shows  the waveform  of the current in the first switching means 3 for a  circuit as shown in  FIG. 3, makes it possible to explain how this  lenthening of the turn-off  time is achieved.
In FIG. 4, the broken lines show the waveform of the current in the first switch device 3 in the circuit of FIG. 1, this waveform being produced by adding waveforms B and C of FIG. 2. The current i 4 above the axis flows through thyristor 4 and current i 5 below the axis flows through diode 5. When the capacitance C 20 of the capacitor in series with the deflector coil is increased to some tens of microfarads (C 2 having been of the order of 1 μ F) and when there is connected in parallel with capacitor 20 a resistor 18 the value of which is calculated to draw a strong current I R18 from capacitor 20, that is to say a current at least equal to 0,1 I m (I m being of the order of some tens of amperes), current I R18 is added to that i 5 which flows through diode 5 without in any way altering the linearity of the trace portion nor the oscillatory commutation of thyristor 4 which is brought about by the resonant circuit L 8 , C 9 .
The fact of loading capacitor C 20 by means of a resistor 18 thus has the effect of permanently displacing the waveform of the current in the negative direction by I R18 . Thus, during the trace portion of the scan, the transfer of the current from the diode 5 to the thyristor 4 begins at time t 10 instead of t 0 , that is to say with a delay proportional to I R18 . The effect of the triggering pulse delivered by the horizontal oscillator (13 FIG. 1) to the second thyristor 11 at time instant t 1 , will be to start the commutation process of the first thyristor 4 when the current it draws is less by I R18 than that i 4 (t 1 ) which it would have been drawing had there been no resistor 18. Because of this, the turn-off time of the thyristor 4 proper, which as has been mentioned increases with the maximum current level passing throught it, is slightly reduced. Moreover, because the oscillatory current i 8 ,9 (FIG. 2) from circuit L 8 , C 9 which flows through thyristor 4 in the opposite direction is unchanged, it reaches a value equal to that of the current i L1 (FIG. 1) flowing in the coil 1 in a shorter time, that is to say at time t 12 . Diode 5 will thus take the oscillatory current i 8 ,9 (FIG. 2) over in advance with respect ro time instant t 2 and will conduct it until it reaches zero value at a time instant t 13 later than t 3 , the amounts of advance (t 2 - t 12 ) and delay (t 13 - t 3 ) being practically equal.
It can thus be seen in FIG. 4 that the circuit turn-off time T R  of a circuit according to the invention and illustrated by FIG. 3 is distinctly longer than that T r  of the circuit in FIG. 1. This increase in the turn-off time (T R  - T r ) depends on the current I R18  and increases therewith.
It should be noted at this point that the current I R18 produces a voltage drop at the terminals of the resistor the only effect of which is to heat up the resistor since the level of this voltage (40 to 60 volts) does not necessarily have a suitable value to be used as a voltage supply for other circuits in an existing transistorised television receiver.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, illustrated in FIG. 5, an application is proposed for the additional current which is to be drawn through diode 5. In FIG. 5, the positive terminal of capacitor 20 is connected by a conductor 19 to the negative pole of the power supply 6 and the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 20 is thus added to that E from the source 6.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, which is shown in FIG. 6, it is possible to cause a supplementary current of a desired value to flow through the first diode 5 while obtaining a voltage which has a suitable value for use in another circuit in the television receiver.
If the voltage at the  terminals of capacitor  20 in FIG. 3 is not a usable value, it is  possible to connect in  parallel with the series circuit comprising the  deflector coil 1 and the  capacitor 2 in FIG. 1, i.e. in parallel with  the terminals of the first  switching means 3, a series combination of  an autotransformer 21 and a  high value capacitor 22 (comparable with  capacitor 20 in FIGS. 3 and 5).  The autotransformer 21 has a tap 23 is  suitably positioned between the  terminal connected to capacitor 22 at  the tap 24 connected to the first  switching means 3. This  autotransformer 21 may be formed by the one  conventionally used for  supplying a very high voltage to the cathode ray  tube, as described for  example in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244; such a  transformer comprises a  voltage step-up winding between taps 24 and 25,  which latter is  connected to a high voltage rectifier (not shown).
The waveform of the voltage at the various points in the autotransformer is shown in FIG. 7, in which waveform A shows the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 22, waveform B the voltage at tap 24 and waveform C the voltage at tap 23 of the autotransformer 21.
The voltage V c22 at the terminals of capacitor 22 varies slightly about a mean value V cm . It is increasing while diode 5 is conducting and decreasing during the conduction of the thyristor 4.
The voltage v 24 at tap 24 follows substantially the same curve as waveform E in FIG. 2, that is to say that during the retrace time interval from t 13 to t 5 to a positive pulse called the flyback pulse is produced and, during the time interval while the first switching means 3 is conducting, the voltage is zero. The mean valve of the voltage v 24 at tap 24 of the auto-transformer 21 is equal to the mean value V cm of the voltage at the terminals of capacitors 2 and 22.
Thus, there is obtained at tap 23 a waveform which is made up, during the retrace portion, of a positive pulse whose maximum amplitude is less than that of v 24 at tap 24 and, during the trace portion, of a substantially constant positive voltage, the level V of which is less than the mean value V cm of
the voltage v c22    at the terminals of capacitor 22. By moving tap 23 towards terminals  24  the amplitude of the pulse during fly-back increases while voltage V   falls and conversely by moving tap 23 towards capacitor 22 voltage V   increases and the amplitude of the pulse drops.
In more exact terms, the voltage V at tap 23 is such that the means value of v 23 is equal to V cm . It has thus been shown that by choosing carefully the position of tape 23, a voltage V may be obtained during the trace portion of the scan, which may be of any value between V cm and zero.
This   voltage V is thus obtained by periodically controlled rectification   during the trace portion of the scan. For this purpose an electronic   switch is used to periodically connect the tap 23 of trnasformer winding   21 to a load. This switch is made up of a power transistor 26 whose   collector is connected to tap 23 and the emitter to a parallel   combination formed by a high value filtering capacitor 27 and the load   which it is desired to supply, which is represented by a resistor 28.   The base of the transistor 26 receives a control voltage to block it   during retrace and to unblock it during the whole or part of the trace   period. A control voltage of this type may be obtained from a second   winding 29 magnetically coupled to the inductance 7 of the deflection   circuit and it may be transmitted to the base of transistor 26 by means   of a coupling capacitor 30 and a resistor 31 connected between the base   and the emitter of transistor 26.
It may easily be seen that the DC collector/emitter current in transistor 26 flows through the first diode 5 of the first switching means 3 via a resistor 28 and the part of the winding of auto-transformer 21 located between taps 23 and 24.
Experience has shown that a circuit as shown in FIG. 6 can supply 24 volts with a current of 2 amperes to the vertical deflection circuit of the same television set, the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 22 being from 50 to 60 volts.
It should be mentioned that, when the circuit which forms the load of the controlled rectifier 26, 27 does not draw enough current to sufficiently lengthen the circuit turn-off time T R , an additional resistor (not shown) may be connected between the emitter of transistor 26 and ground or in parallel to capacitor 22, which resistor will draw the additional current required.
The   present invention constitutes an improvement in the circuit described   in U.S. Pat. No. 3,449,623 filed on Sept. 6, 1966, this circuit being   described in greater detail below with reference to FIGS. 1 and 2 of the   accompanying drawings. A deflection circuit of this type comprises a   first thyristor switch which allows the conenction of the horizontal   deflection winding to a constant voltage source during the time interval   used for the transmisstion of the picture signal and for applying this   signal to the grid of the cathode ray tube (this interval will be  termed  the "trace portion" of the scan), and a second thyristor switch  which  provides the forced commutation of the first one by applying to  it a  reverse current of equal amplitude to that which passes through it  from  the said voltage source and thus to initiate the retrace during  the  horizontal blanking interval.A undirectional reverse blocking triode type thyristor or silicon controlled rectifier (SCR), such as that used in the aformentioned circuit, requires a certain turn-off time between the instant at which the anode current ceases and the instant at which a positive bias may be applied to it without turning it on, due to the fact that there is still a high concentration of free carriers in the vicinity of the middle junction, this concentration being reduced by a process of recombination independently from the reverse polarity applied to the thyristor. This turn-off time of the thyristor is a function of a number of parameters such as the junction temperature, the DC current level, the decay time of the direct current, the peak level of the reverse current applied, the amplitude of the reverse anode to cathode voltage, the external impedance of the gate electrode, and so on, certain of these varying considerably from one thyristor to another.
In   horizontal deflection circuits for television receivers, the flyback  or  retrace time is limited to approximately 20 percent of the  horizontal  scan period, the retrace time being in the case of the CCIR  standard of  625 lines, approximately 12 microseconds and, in the case  of the French  standard of 819 lines, approximately 9 microseconds.  During this  relatively short interval, the thyristor has to be rendered   non-conducting and the electron beam has to be returned to the origin  of  the scan. The first thyristor is blocked by means of a series  resonant  LC circuit which is subject to a certain number of  restrictions  (limitations as to the component values employed) due to  the fact that,  inter alia, it simultaneously determines the turn-off  time of the  circuit which blocks the thyristor and it forms part of the  series  resonant circuit which is to carry out the retrace. To obtain  proper  operation of the deflection circuit of the aforementioned  Patent,  especially when used for the French standard of 819 lines per  image, the  values of the components used have to subject to very close  tolerances  (approximately 2%), which results in high costs.The improved deflection circuit, object of the present invention, allows the lengthening of the turn-off time of the circuit for turning the scan thyristor off, without altering the values of the LC circuit, which are determined by other criteria, and without impairing the operation of the circuit.
According to the invention, there is  provided an  electron beam deflection circuit for a cathode ray tube  with  electromagentic deflection by means of a sawtooth current waveform   having a trace portion and a retrace portion, said circuit comprising:  a  deflection winding; a first source of electrical energy formed by a   first capacitor; first controllable switching means comprising a   parallel combination of a first thyristor and a first diode, connected   together to conduct in opposite directions, for connecting said winding   to said first source during said trace portion when said first  switching  means is turned on; a second source of electrical energy  including a  first inductive energy storage means coupled to a voltage  supply;  reactive circuit means including a combination of inductive   and capacitive reactances for storing the energy supplied by the said   second source; a second controllable switching means, substantially   identical with the first one, for completing a circuit including said   reactive circuit means and said first switching means, when turned on,   so as to pass through said first thyristor an oscillatory current in the   opposite direction to that which passes through it from said first   source and to turn it off after these two currents cancel out, the   oscillatory current then flowing through said first diode for an   interval termed the circuit turn-off time which has to be greater than   the turn-off time of said first thyristor; and means for drawing duing   at least a part of said trace portion a substantial amount of additional   current from said first switching means in the direction of conduction   of said first diode, whereby said circuit turn-off time is lengthened  in  proportion to the amount of said additional current, without  altering  the values of the reactances in the reactive circuit by  shifting the  waveform of the current flowing through said first  switching means  towards the negative by an amount equal to that of said  additional  current.A further object of the invention consists in using the supplementary current in the recovery diode of the first switching means to produce a DC voltage which may be used as a power supply for the vertical deflection circuit of the television receiver, for example.
The invention will be better understood and other features and advantages thereof will become apparent from the following description and the accompanying drawings, given by way of example, and in which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic circuit diagram partially in bloc diagram form of a prior art deflection circuit according to the aforementioned Patent;
FIG. 2 shows waveforms of currents and voltages generated at various points in the circuit of FIG. 1;FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram of a deflection circuit according to the invention which allows the principle of the improvement to be explained;
FIG. 4 is a diagram of the waveforms of the current through the first switching means 4, 5 of the circuit of FIG. 3;
FIG. 5 is a circuit diagram of another embodiment of the circuit according to the invention;
FIG. 6 is a schematic representation of the preferred embodiment of the circuit according to the invention; and
FIG. 7 shows voltage waveforms at various points of the high voltage autotransformer 21 of FIG. 6.
In all these Figures the same reference numerals refer to the same components.
FIG.   1 shows the horizontal deflection circuit described and claimed in the   U.S. Pat. No. 3,449,623 mentioned above, which comprises a first  source  of electrical energy in the shape of a first capacitor 2 having a  high  capacitance C 2  for supplying a substantially constant voltage Uc 2    across its terminals. A first terminal of the first capacitor 2 is   connected to ground, whilst its second terminal which supplies a   positive voltage is connected to one of the terminals of a horizontal   deflection winding shown as a first inductance 1. A first switching   means 3, consisting of a first reverse blocking triode thyristor 4 (SCR)   and a first recovery diode 5 in parallel, the two being interconnected   to conduct current in opposite directions, is connected in parallel  with  the series combination formed by the deflection winding 1 and the  first  capacitor 2. The assembly of components 1, 2, 4 and 5 forms the  final  stage of the horizontal deflection circuit in a television  receiver  using electromagnetic delfection.The deflection circuit also includes a drive stage for this final stage which here controls the turning off of the first thyristor 4 to produce the retrace or fly-back portion of the scan during the line-blanking intervals i.e. while the picture signal is not transmitted. This driver stage comprises a second voltage source in the shape of a DC power supply 6 which delivers a constant high voltage E. The negative terminal of the power supply 6 is connected to ground and its positive terminal to one of the terminals of a second inductance 7 of relatively high value, which draws a substantially lineraly varying current from the power supply 6 to avoid its overloading. The other terminal of the second inductance 7 is connected, on the one hand, to the junction of the deflection winding 1 and the first switching means 3 by means of a second inductance 8 and a second capacitor 9 in series and, on the other hand, to one of the terminals of a second controllable bi-directionally conducting switching means 10, similar to the first one 3, including a parallel combination of a second thyristor 11 and a second recovery diode 12 also arranged to conduct in opposite directions.
The respective values of the third inductance 8 (L 8 ) and of the second capacitor 9 (C 9 ) are principally selected so that, on the one hand, one half-cycle of oscillation o
f the first series resonant circuit L 8  - C 9 , (i.e. π √ L 8  .  C 9 )   is longer than the turn-off time of the first thyristor 4, but still  is  as short as possible since this time interval determines the speed  of  the commutation of the thyristor 4, and, on the other hand, one   half-cycle of oscillation of another series resonant circuit formed by L   1 , L 8  and C 9 , i.e. π √ (L 1  + L 8 ) .  C 9 , is substantially equal to the required retrace time interval (i.e. shorter than the horizontal blanking interval).The gate (control electrode) of the second thyristor 11 is coupled to the output of the horizontal oscillator 13 of the television receiver by means of a first pulse transformer 14 and a first pulse shaping circuit 15 so that it is fed short triggering pulses which are to turn it on.
The gate of the first thyristor 4 fed with signals of a substantially rectangular waveform which are negative during the horizontal blanking intervals, is coupled to a winding 16 by means of a second pulse shaping circuit 17, the winding 16 being magnetically coupled to the second inductance 7 to make up the secondary winding of a transformer of which the inductance 7 forms the primary winding. It will be noted here that it is also possible to couple the secondary winding 16 magnetically to a primary winding connected to a suitable output (not shown) of the horizontal oscillator 13.
The operation of a circuit of this type will be explained below with reference to FIG. 2 which shows the waveforms at various points in the circuit of FIG. 1 during approximately one line period.
FIG. 2 is not to scale since one line period (t 7  - t 0 )   is equal to 64 microseconds in the case of 625 lines and 49   microseconds in the case of 819 lines, while the durations of the   respective horizontal blanking intervals are approximately 12 and 9.5   microseconds.Waveform A shows the form of the current i L1 passing through deflection winding 1, this current having a sawtooth waveform substantially linear from t 0 to t 3 and from t 5 to t 7 , and crossing zero at time instants t 0 and t 7 , and reaching values of + I 1m and - I 1m , at time instants t 3 and t 5 respectively, these being its maximum positive and negative amplitudes.
During the second half of the trace portion of the horizontal deflection cycle, that is to say from t 0 to t 3 , the thyristor 4 of the first switching means 3 is conductive and makes the high value capacitor 2 discharge through the deflector winding 1, which has a high inductance, so that current i L1 increases linearly.
A few microseconds (5 to 8 μ s) before the end of the trace portion, i.e. at time instant t 1 , the trigger of the second thyristor 11 receives a short voltage pulse V G11    which causes it to turn on as its anode is at this instant at a   positive potential with respect to ground, which is due to the charging   of the second capacitor 9 through inductances 7 and 8 by the voltage E   from the power supply 6.When thyristor 11 is made conductive at time t 1 , on the one hand, inductance 7 is connected between ground and the voltage source 6 and a linearly increasing current flows through it and, on the other hand, the reactive circuit 8, 9 forms a loop through the second and first switching means 10 and 3, thus forming a resonant circuit which draws an oscillatory current i 8 ,9 of frequency ##EQU1##
This oscillatory current i 8 ,9 will pass through the first switching means 3, i.e. thyristor 4 and diode 5, in the opposite direction to that of current i L1 . Since the frequency f 1 is high, current i 8 ,9 will increase more rapidly than i L1 and will reach the same level at time t 2 , that is to say i 8 ,9 (t 2 ) = -i L1 (t 2 ) and these currents will cancel out in the thyristor 4 in accordance with the well known principle of forced commutation. After time instant t 2 , current i 8 ,9 continues to increase more rapidly than i L1 , but the difference between them (i 8 ,9 - i L1 ) passes the diode 5 (see wave form B) until it becomes zero at time instant t 3 which is the turn off time instant of the first switching means 3, at which the retrace begins.
The interval between the time instant t 2 and t 3 , i.e. (t 3 -t 2 ), during which diode 5 is conductive and the thyristor is reverse biased will be termed in what follows the circuit turn-off time and it should be greater than the turn-off time of the thyristor 4 itself since the latter will subsequently become foward biased (i.e. from t 3 to t 5 ) by the retrace or flyback pulse (see waveform E) which should not trigger it.
At time instant t 3 , the switching means 3 is opened (i 4  and i 5    are both zero -- see waveforms B and C) and the reactive circuit 8, 9   forms a loop through capacitor 2 and the deflection coil 1 and thus a   series resonant circuit including (L 1  + L 8 ) and C 9 , C 2  being of high value and representing a short circuit for the flyback frequency ##EQU2## thus obtained.The retrace which stated at time t 3 takes place during one half-cycle of the resonant circuit formed by reactances L 1 , L 8 and C 9 , i.e. during the interval between t 3 and t 5 . In the middle of this interval i.e. at time instant t 4 , both i L1 (waveform A) and i 8 ,9 (waveform D) pass through zero and change their sign, whereas the voltage at the terminals of the first switching means 3 (V 3 , waveform E) passes through a maximum. Thus, from t 4 onwards, thyristor 11 will be reverse biased and diode 12 will conduct the current from the resonant circuit 1, 8 and 9 in order to turn the second thyristor 11 off.
At time instant t 5 , when current i L1 has reached - I 1m and when voltage v 3 falls to zero, diode 5 of the first switching means 3 becomes conductive and the trace portion of scan begins.
Current i 8 ,9 nevertheless continues to flow in the resonant circuit 8, 9 through diodes 5 and 12, which causes a break to appear in waveform D at t 5 , and a negative peak to appear in waveform D and a positive one in waveform B in the interval between t 5 and t 6 , these being principally due to the distributed capacities of coil 1 or to an eventual capacitor (not shown) connected in parallel to the first switching means 3.
At time instant t 6 , diode 12 of the second switching means 10 ceases to conduct after having allowed thyristor 11 time to become turned off completely.
The level of current i 8 ,9 at time instant t 5 (i.e. I c ) as well as the negative peak I D12 in i 8 ,9 and the positive peak I D5 in i 5 depend on the values of L 8 and C 9 in the same way as does t
he turn-off time of the circuit (t 3  - t 2 ). If, for example, L 8  and C 9 , are increased I D5  increases towards zero and this could cause diode 5 to be cut off in an undesirable fashion. I c  also increases towards zero, which is liable to cause diode 12 to be blocked and thyristor 11 to trigger prematurely.From the foregoing it can be clearly seen that the choice of values for L 8 and C 9 is subject to four limitations which prevent the values from being increased to lengthen the turn-off time of the driver circuit of first switching thyristor 4 so as to forestall its spurious triggering.
Waveform F shows the voltage v G4 obtained at the gate of thyristor 4 from the secondary winding 16 coupled to the inductor 7. This voltage is positive from t 0 to t 1 and from t 6 to t 7 and is negative between t 2 and t 6 i.e. while the second switching means 10 is conducting.
The present invention makes the lengthening of the turn-off time of thyristor 4 possible without altering the parameters of the circuit such as inductance 8 and capacitor 9.
In   the circuit shown in FIG. 3, which illustrates the principle of the   present invention, means are added to the circuit in FIG. 1 which enable   the turn-off time to be lengthened by connecting a load to diode 5 so   as to increase the current which flows through it during the time that   it is conductive. These means are here formed by a resistor 18  connected  in parallel with a capacitor 20 (which replaces capacitor 2)  which is  of a higher capacitance so that, in practice, it holds its  charge during  at least one half of the line period. FIG. 4, which shows  the waveform  of the current in the first switching means 3 for a  circuit as shown in  FIG. 3, makes it possible to explain how this  lenthening of the turn-off  time is achieved.In FIG. 4, the broken lines show the waveform of the current in the first switch device 3 in the circuit of FIG. 1, this waveform being produced by adding waveforms B and C of FIG. 2. The current i 4 above the axis flows through thyristor 4 and current i 5 below the axis flows through diode 5. When the capacitance C 20 of the capacitor in series with the deflector coil is increased to some tens of microfarads (C 2 having been of the order of 1 μ F) and when there is connected in parallel with capacitor 20 a resistor 18 the value of which is calculated to draw a strong current I R18 from capacitor 20, that is to say a current at least equal to 0,1 I m (I m being of the order of some tens of amperes), current I R18 is added to that i 5 which flows through diode 5 without in any way altering the linearity of the trace portion nor the oscillatory commutation of thyristor 4 which is brought about by the resonant circuit L 8 , C 9 .
The fact of loading capacitor C 20 by means of a resistor 18 thus has the effect of permanently displacing the waveform of the current in the negative direction by I R18 . Thus, during the trace portion of the scan, the transfer of the current from the diode 5 to the thyristor 4 begins at time t 10 instead of t 0 , that is to say with a delay proportional to I R18 . The effect of the triggering pulse delivered by the horizontal oscillator (13 FIG. 1) to the second thyristor 11 at time instant t 1 , will be to start the commutation process of the first thyristor 4 when the current it draws is less by I R18 than that i 4 (t 1 ) which it would have been drawing had there been no resistor 18. Because of this, the turn-off time of the thyristor 4 proper, which as has been mentioned increases with the maximum current level passing throught it, is slightly reduced. Moreover, because the oscillatory current i 8 ,9 (FIG. 2) from circuit L 8 , C 9 which flows through thyristor 4 in the opposite direction is unchanged, it reaches a value equal to that of the current i L1 (FIG. 1) flowing in the coil 1 in a shorter time, that is to say at time t 12 . Diode 5 will thus take the oscillatory current i 8 ,9 (FIG. 2) over in advance with respect ro time instant t 2 and will conduct it until it reaches zero value at a time instant t 13 later than t 3 , the amounts of advance (t 2 - t 12 ) and delay (t 13 - t 3 ) being practically equal.
It can thus be seen in FIG. 4 that the circuit turn-off time T R  of a circuit according to the invention and illustrated by FIG. 3 is distinctly longer than that T r  of the circuit in FIG. 1. This increase in the turn-off time (T R  - T r ) depends on the current I R18  and increases therewith.It should be noted at this point that the current I R18 produces a voltage drop at the terminals of the resistor the only effect of which is to heat up the resistor since the level of this voltage (40 to 60 volts) does not necessarily have a suitable value to be used as a voltage supply for other circuits in an existing transistorised television receiver.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, illustrated in FIG. 5, an application is proposed for the additional current which is to be drawn through diode 5. In FIG. 5, the positive terminal of capacitor 20 is connected by a conductor 19 to the negative pole of the power supply 6 and the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 20 is thus added to that E from the source 6.
In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, which is shown in FIG. 6, it is possible to cause a supplementary current of a desired value to flow through the first diode 5 while obtaining a voltage which has a suitable value for use in another circuit in the television receiver.
If the voltage at the  terminals of capacitor  20 in FIG. 3 is not a usable value, it is  possible to connect in  parallel with the series circuit comprising the  deflector coil 1 and the  capacitor 2 in FIG. 1, i.e. in parallel with  the terminals of the first  switching means 3, a series combination of  an autotransformer 21 and a  high value capacitor 22 (comparable with  capacitor 20 in FIGS. 3 and 5).  The autotransformer 21 has a tap 23 is  suitably positioned between the  terminal connected to capacitor 22 at  the tap 24 connected to the first  switching means 3. This  autotransformer 21 may be formed by the one  conventionally used for  supplying a very high voltage to the cathode ray  tube, as described for  example in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244; such a  transformer comprises a  voltage step-up winding between taps 24 and 25,  which latter is  connected to a high voltage rectifier (not shown).The waveform of the voltage at the various points in the autotransformer is shown in FIG. 7, in which waveform A shows the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 22, waveform B the voltage at tap 24 and waveform C the voltage at tap 23 of the autotransformer 21.
The voltage V c22 at the terminals of capacitor 22 varies slightly about a mean value V cm . It is increasing while diode 5 is conducting and decreasing during the conduction of the thyristor 4.
The voltage v 24 at tap 24 follows substantially the same curve as waveform E in FIG. 2, that is to say that during the retrace time interval from t 13 to t 5 to a positive pulse called the flyback pulse is produced and, during the time interval while the first switching means 3 is conducting, the voltage is zero. The mean valve of the voltage v 24 at tap 24 of the auto-transformer 21 is equal to the mean value V cm of the voltage at the terminals of capacitors 2 and 22.
Thus, there is obtained at tap 23 a waveform which is made up, during the retrace portion, of a positive pulse whose maximum amplitude is less than that of v 24 at tap 24 and, during the trace portion, of a substantially constant positive voltage, the level V of which is less than the mean value V cm of
the voltage v c22    at the terminals of capacitor 22. By moving tap 23 towards terminals  24  the amplitude of the pulse during fly-back increases while voltage V   falls and conversely by moving tap 23 towards capacitor 22 voltage V   increases and the amplitude of the pulse drops.In more exact terms, the voltage V at tap 23 is such that the means value of v 23 is equal to V cm . It has thus been shown that by choosing carefully the position of tape 23, a voltage V may be obtained during the trace portion of the scan, which may be of any value between V cm and zero.
This   voltage V is thus obtained by periodically controlled rectification   during the trace portion of the scan. For this purpose an electronic   switch is used to periodically connect the tap 23 of trnasformer winding   21 to a load. This switch is made up of a power transistor 26 whose   collector is connected to tap 23 and the emitter to a parallel   combination formed by a high value filtering capacitor 27 and the load   which it is desired to supply, which is represented by a resistor 28.   The base of the transistor 26 receives a control voltage to block it   during retrace and to unblock it during the whole or part of the trace   period. A control voltage of this type may be obtained from a second   winding 29 magnetically coupled to the inductance 7 of the deflection   circuit and it may be transmitted to the base of transistor 26 by means   of a coupling capacitor 30 and a resistor 31 connected between the base   and the emitter of transistor 26.It may easily be seen that the DC collector/emitter current in transistor 26 flows through the first diode 5 of the first switching means 3 via a resistor 28 and the part of the winding of auto-transformer 21 located between taps 23 and 24.
Experience has shown that a circuit as shown in FIG. 6 can supply 24 volts with a current of 2 amperes to the vertical deflection circuit of the same television set, the voltage at the terminals of capacitor 22 being from 50 to 60 volts.
It should be mentioned that, when the circuit which forms the load of the controlled rectifier 26, 27 does not draw enough current to sufficiently lengthen the circuit turn-off time T R , an additional resistor (not shown) may be connected between the emitter of transistor 26 and ground or in parallel to capacitor 22, which resistor will draw the additional current required.
INTEGRAL THYRISTOR-RECTIFIER DEVICEA   semiconductor switching device comprising a silicon controlled   rectifier (SCR) and a diode rectifier integrally connected in parallel   with the SCR in a single semiconductor body. The device is of the NPNP   or PNPN type, having gate, cathode, and anode electrodes. A portion of   each intermediate N and P region makes ohmic contact to the respective   anode or cathode electrode of the SCR. In addition, each intermediate   region includes a highly conductive edge portion. These portions are   spaced from the adjacent external regions by relatively low conductive   portions, and limit the conduction of the diode rectifier to the   periphery of the device. A profile of gold recombination centers further   electrically isolates the central SCR portion from the peripheral  diode  portion.
That class of thyristors known as  controlled  rectifiers are semiconductor switches having four  semiconducting regions  of alternate conductivity and which employ  anode, cathode, and gate  electrodes. These devices are usually  fabricated from silicon. In its  normal state, the silicon controlled  rectifier (SCR) is non-conductive  until an appropriate voltage or  current pulse is applied to the gate  electrode, at which point current  flows from the anode to the cathode  and delivers power to a load  circuit. If the SCR is reverse biased, it  is non-conductive, and cannot  be turned on by a gating signal. Once  conduction starts, the gate  loses control and current flows from the  anode to the cathode until it  drops below a certain value (called the  holding current), at which  point the SCR turns off and the gate  electrode regains control. The SCR  is thus a solid state device capable  of performing the circuit  function of a thyratron tube in many  electronic applications. In some  of these applications, such as in  automobile ignition systems and  horizontal deflection circuits in  television receivers, it is necessary  to connect a separate rectifier  diode in parallel with the SCR. See,  for example, W. Dietz, U. S. Pat.  Nos. 3,452,244 and 3,449,623. In  these applications, the anode of the  rectifier diode is connected to  the cathode of the SCR, and the cathode  of the rectifier is connected  to the SCR anode. Thus, the rectifier  diode will be forward biased and  current will flow through it when the  SCR is reverse biased; i.e., when  the SCR cathode is positive with  respect to its anode. For reasons of  economy and ease of handling, it  would be preferable if the circuit  function of the SCR and the  associated diode rectifier could be  combined in a single device, so that  instead of requiring two devices  and five electrical connections, one  device and three electrical  connections are all that would be necessary.  In fact, because of the  semiconductor profile employed, many SCR's of  the shorted emitter  variety inherently function as a diode rectifier  when reverse biased.  However, the diode rectifier function of such  devices is not isolated  from the controlled rectifier portion, thus  preventing a rapid  transition from one function to the other. Therefore,  it would be  desirable to physically and electrically isolate the diode  rectifier  portion from that portion of the device which functions as an  SCR.
Gating circuit for television SCR deflection system AND   REGULATION / stabilization of horizontal deflection NETWORK CIRCUIT   with Transductor reactor / Reverse thyristor energy recovery circuit.In a television deflection system employing a first SCR for coupling a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace interval of each deflection cycle and a second SCR for replenishing energy to the source of energy during a commutation interval of each deflection cycle, a gating circuit for triggering the first SCR. The gating circuit employs a voltage divider coupled in parallel with the second SCR which develops gating signals proportional to the voltage across the second SCR.

1. In a television deflection system in which a first switching means couples a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace interval of each deflection cycle and a second switching means replenishes energy to said source of energy during a commutation interval of each deflection cycle, a gating circuit for said first switching means, comprising:
capacitive voltage divider means coupled in parallel with said second switching means for developing gating signals proportional to the voltage across said second switching means; and
means for coupling said voltage divider means to said first switching means to provide for conduction of said first switching means in response to said gating signals.
2. A gating circuit according to claim 1 wherein said voltage divider includes first and second capacitors coupled in series and providing said gating signals at the common terminal of said capacitors. 3. A gating circuit according to claim 2 wherein said first and second capacitors are proportional in value to provide for the desired magnitude of gating signals. 4. A gating circuit according to claim 3 wherein said means for coupling said voltage divider means to said first switching means includes an inductor. 5. A gating circuit according to claim 4 wherein said inductor and said first and second capacitors comprise a resonant circuit having a resonant frequency chosen to shape said gating signal to improve switching of said first switching means.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
This   invention relates to a gating circuit for controlling a switching   device employed in a deflection circuit of a television receiver. 





Various deflection system designs have been utilized in television receivers. One design employing two bidirectional conducting switches and utilizing SCR's (thyristors) as part of the switches is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244. In this type deflection system, a first SCR is




employed for coupling a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace interval of each deflection cycle, and a second SCR is employed for replenishing energy during a commutation interval of each deflection cycle. The first SCR is commonly provided with gating voltage by means of a separate winding or tap of an input reactor coupling a source of B+ to the second SCR.
Various regulator system designs have been utilized in conjunction with the afore described deflection system to provide for uniform high voltage production as well as uniform picture width with varying line voltage and kinescope beam current conditions.
One type regulator system design alters the amount of energy stored in a commutating capacitor coupled between the first and second SCR's during the commutating interval. A regulator design of this type may employ a regulating SCR and diode for coupling the input reactor to the source of B+. With this type regulator a notch, the width of which depends upon the regulation requirements, is created in the current supplied through the reactor and which notch shows up in the voltage waveform developed on the separate winding or tap of the input reactor which provides the gating voltage for the first SCR. The presence of the notch, even though de-emphasized by a waveshaping circuit coupling the gating voltage to the first SCR, causes erratic control of the first SCR.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In   accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a gating circuit of a   television deflection system employing a first switching means for   coupling a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace   interval of each deflection cycle and a second switching means for   replenishing energy to said source of energy during a commutation   interval of each deflection cycle includes a voltage divider means   coupled in parallel with the second switching means for developing   gating signals proportional to the voltage across the second switching   means. The voltage divider means are coupled to the first switching   means to provide for conduction of the first switching means in response   to the gating signals. 
A more detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention is given in the following description and accompanying drawing of which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a prior art SCR deflection system;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of an SCR deflection system of the type shown in FIG. 1 including a gating circuit embodying the invention;
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of one type of a regulator system which employs an SCR as a control device and which is suitable for use with the SCR deflection system of FIG.2;
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of another type of a regulator system suitable for use with the deflection circuit of FIG. 2; and
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of still another type of a regulator system suitable for use with the SCR deflection system of FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG.   1 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a prior art   deflection system of the retrace driven type similar to that disclosed   in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244. This system includes a commutating switch   12, comprising a silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) 14 and an oppositely   poled damper diode 16. The commutating switch 12 is coupled between a   winding 18a of an input choke 18 and ground. The other terminal of   winding 18a is coupled to a source of direct current voltage (B+) by   means of a regulator network 20 which controls the energy stored in the   deflection circuit 10 when the commutating switch is off, during an   interval T3 to T0' as shown in curve 21 which is a plot of the voltage   level at the anode of SCR 14 during the deflection cycle. A damping   network comprising a series combination of a resistor 22 and a capacitor   23 is coupled in parallel with commutating switch 12 and serves to   reduce any ringing effects produced by the switching of commutating   switch 12. Commutating switch 12 is coupled through a commutating coil   24, a commutating capacitor 25 and a trace switch 26 to ground. Trace   switch 26 comprises an SCR 28 and an oppositely poled damper diode 30.   An auxiliary capacitor 32 is coupled between the junction of coil 24 and   capacitor 25 and ground. A series combination of a horizontal   deflection winding 34 and an S-shaping capacitor 36 are coupled in   parallel with trace switch 26. Also, a series combination of a primary   winding 38a of a horizontal output transformer 38 and a DC blocking   capacitor 40 are coupled in parallel with trace switch 26. 
A   secondary of high voltage winding 38b of transformer 38 produces   relatively large amplitude flyback pulses during the retrace interval of   each deflection cycle. This interval exists between T1 and T2 of curve   41 which is a plot of the current through windings 34 and 38a during  the  deflection cycle. These flyback pulses are applied to a high  voltage  multiplier (not shown) or other suitable means for producing  direct  current high voltage for use as the ultor voltage of a kinescope  (not  shown). 
An auxiliary winding 38c of transformer 38 is coupled to a high voltage sensing and control circuit 42 which transforms the level of flyback pulses into a pulse width modulated signal. The control circuit 42 is coupled to the regulator network 20.
A horizontal oscillator 44 is coupled to the gate electrode of commutating SCR 14 and produces a pulse during each deflection cycle slightly before the end of the trace interval at T0 of curve 21 to turn on SCR 14 to initiate the commutating interval. The commutating interval occurs between T0 and T3 of curve 21. A resonant waveshaping network 46 comprising a series combination of a capacitor 48 and an inductor 50 coupled between a winding 18b of input choke 18 and the gate electrode of trace SCR 28 and a damping resistor 52 coupled between the junction of capacitor 48 and inductor 50 and ground shapes the signal developed at winding 18b (i.e. voltage waveform 53) to form a gating signal voltage waveform 55 to enable SCR 28 for conduction during the second half of the trace interval occurring between T2 and T1' of curve 41.
The   regulator network 20, when of a type to be described in conjunction   with FIG. 3, operates in such a manner that current through winding 18a   of input choke 18 during an interval between T4 and T5 (region A) of   curves 21, 53 and 55 is interrupted for a period of time the duration of   which is determined by the signal produced by the high voltage sensing   and control circuit 42. During the interruption of current through   winding 18a a zero voltage level is developed by winding 18b as shown in   interval T4 to T5 of curve 53. The resonant waveshaping circuit 46   produces the shaped waveform 55 which undesirably retains a slump in   region A corresponding to the notch A of waveform 53. The slump in   waveform 55 applied to SCR 28 occurs in a region where the anode of SCR   28 becomes positive and where SCR 28 must be switched on to maintain a   uniform production of the current waveshape in the horizontal  deflection  winding 34 as shown in curve 41. The less positive amplitude  current  occurring at region A of waveform 55 may result in  insufficient gating  current for SCR 28 and may cause erratic  performance resulting in an  unsatisfactory raster. 
FIG.   2 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a deflection   system 60 embodying the invention. Those elements which perform the same   function in FIG. 2 as in FIG. 1 are labeled with the same reference   numerals. FIG. 2 differs from FIG. 1 essentially in that the signal to   enable SCR 28 derived from sampling a portion of the voltage across   commutating switch 12 rather than a voltage developed by winding 18b   which is a function of the voltage across winding 18a of input choke 18   as in FIG. 1. This change eliminates the slump in the enabling signal   during the interval T4 to T5 as shown in curve 64 since the voltage   across the commutating switch 12 is not adversely effected by the   regulator network 20 operation. 
A series combination of resistor 22, capacitor 23 and a capacitor 62 is coupled in parallel with commutating switch 12, one terminal of capacitor 62 being coupled to ground. The junction of capacitors 23 and 62 is coupled to the gate electrode of SCR 28 by means of the inductor 50. The resistor 52 is coupled in parallel with capacitor 62.
Capacitors 23 and 62 form a capacitance voltage divider which provides a suitable portion of the voltage across commutating switch 12 for gating SCR 28 via inductor 50. The magnitude of the voltage at the junction of capacitors 23 and 62 is typically 25 to 35 volts. It can, therefore, be seen that the ratio of values of capacitors 23 and 62 will vary depending on the B+ voltage utilized to energize the deflection system. Capacitors 23 and 62 and inductor 50 form a resonant circuit tuned in a manner which provides for peaking of the curve 64 between T4 and T5. This peaking effect further enhances gating of SCR 28 between T4 and T5.
Since the waveshape of the voltage across commutating switch 12 (curve 21) is relatively independent of the type of regulator system employed in conjunction with the deflection system, the curve 64 also is independent of the type of regulator system.
When commutating switch 12 switches off during the interval T3 to T0' curve 21, the voltage across capacitor 62 increases and the voltage at the gate electrode of SCR 28 increases as shown in curve 64. As will be noted, no slump of curve 64 occurs between T3 and T5 because there is no interruption of the voltage across commutating switch 12.





FIG.   3 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of one type of a   regulator system which may be used in conjunction with the invention. B+   is supplied through a regulator network 20 which comprises an SCR 66   and an oppositely poled diode 68. The diode is poled to provide for   conduction of current from B+ to the horizontal deflection circuit 60   via winding 18a of input choke 18. Current flows through the diode   during the period T3 to T4 of curve 21 FIG. 1 after which current tries   to flow through the SCR 66 from the horizontal deflection circuit to B+   since the commutating capacitor 25 is charged to a voltage higher than   B+. 
The horizontal deflection circuit 60 produces a flyback pulse in winding 38a of the flyback transformer 38 which is coupled to winding 38c. The magnitude of the pulse on winding 38c determines how long the signal required to switch SCR 66 on is delayed after T4 curve 21 FIG. 1. If the flyback pulse is greater than desirable, the SCR 66 turns on sooner than if the flyback pulse is less than desirable and provides a discharge path for current in commutating capacitor 25 back to the B+ supply. In this manner a relatively constant amplitude flyback pulse is maintained.
FIG.   4 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of another   well-known type of a regulator system which may be used in conjunction   with the invention shown in FIG. 2. B+ is coupled through winding 18a of   input choke 18 and through a series combination of windings 70a and  70b  of a saturable reactor 70 and a parallel combination of a diode 72  and a  resistor 74 to the horizontal deflection circuit 60. Diode 72 is  poled  to conduct current from the horizontal deflection circuit 60 to  B+. 
Flyback pulse variations are obtained from winding 38c of the horizontal output transformer 38 and applied to a voltage divider comprising resistors 76, 78 and 80 of the high voltage sensing and control circuit 42. A portion of the pulse produced by winding 38c is selected by the position of the wiper terminal on potentiometer 78 and coupled to the base electrode of a transistor 82 by means of a zener diode 84. The emitter electrode of transistor 82 is grounded and a DC stabilization resistor 85 is coupled in parallel with the base-emitter junction of transistor 82. When the pulse magnitude on winding 38c exceeds a level which results in forward biasing the base-emitter junction of transistor 82, current flows from B+ through a resistor 86, a winding 70c of saturable reactor 70 and transistor 82 to ground. Due to the exponential increase of current in winding 70c during the period of conduction of transistor 82, the duration of conduction of transistor 82 determines the magnitude of current flowing in winding 70c and thus the total inductance of windings 70a and 70b. The current in winding 70c is sustained during the remaining deflection period by means of a diode 88 coupled in parallel with winding 70c and poled not to conduct current from B+ to the collector electrode of transistor 82. A capacitor 90 coupled to the cathode of diode 88 provides a bypass for B+. Windings 70a and 70b are in parallel with input reactor 18a and thereby affect the total input inductance of the deflection circuit and thereby controls the transfer of energy to the deflection circuit. The dotted waveforms shown in conjunction with a curve 21' indicate variations from a nominal waveform provided at the input of horizontal deflection circuit 60 by the windings 70a and 70b.



FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of yet another type of a regulator system which may be used in conjunction with the invention. B+ is coupled through a winding 92a and a winding 92b of a saturable reactor to the horizontal deflection circuit 60. Windings 92a and 92b are used to replace the input choke 18 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 while also providing for a regulating function corresponding to that provided by regulating network 20.
Flyback pulse variations are obtained from winding 38c and applied to the high voltage sensing and control circuit 42 as in FIG. 4. Current flows from B+ through resistor 86, a winding 92c and transistor 82 to ground. As in FIG. 4 the duration of the conduction of transistor 82 determines the energy stored in winding 92c and thus the total inductance of windings 92a and 92b which control the amount of energy transferred to the deflection circuit during each horizontal deflection cycle. The variations in waveforms of curve 21', shown in conjunction with FIG. 4, are also provided at the input of horizontal deflection circuit 60 by windings 92a and 92b.
For various reasons including cost or performance, a manufacturer may wish to utilize a particular one of the regulators illustrated in FIGS. 3, 4 and 5. Regardless of the choice, the gating circuit according to the invention may be utilized therewith advantageously by providing improved performance and the possibility of cost savings by eliminating taps or extra windings on the wound components which heretofore normally provided a source of SCR gating waveforms.
This   invention relates to a gating circuit for controlling a switching   device employed in a deflection circuit of a television receiver. 




Various deflection system designs have been utilized in television receivers. One design employing two bidirectional conducting switches and utilizing SCR's (thyristors) as part of the switches is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244. In this type deflection system, a first SCR is




employed for coupling a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace interval of each deflection cycle, and a second SCR is employed for replenishing energy during a commutation interval of each deflection cycle. The first SCR is commonly provided with gating voltage by means of a separate winding or tap of an input reactor coupling a source of B+ to the second SCR.
Various regulator system designs have been utilized in conjunction with the afore described deflection system to provide for uniform high voltage production as well as uniform picture width with varying line voltage and kinescope beam current conditions.
One type regulator system design alters the amount of energy stored in a commutating capacitor coupled between the first and second SCR's during the commutating interval. A regulator design of this type may employ a regulating SCR and diode for coupling the input reactor to the source of B+. With this type regulator a notch, the width of which depends upon the regulation requirements, is created in the current supplied through the reactor and which notch shows up in the voltage waveform developed on the separate winding or tap of the input reactor which provides the gating voltage for the first SCR. The presence of the notch, even though de-emphasized by a waveshaping circuit coupling the gating voltage to the first SCR, causes erratic control of the first SCR.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In   accordance with one embodiment of the invention, a gating circuit of a   television deflection system employing a first switching means for   coupling a deflection winding across a source of energy during a trace   interval of each deflection cycle and a second switching means for   replenishing energy to said source of energy during a commutation   interval of each deflection cycle includes a voltage divider means   coupled in parallel with the second switching means for developing   gating signals proportional to the voltage across the second switching   means. The voltage divider means are coupled to the first switching   means to provide for conduction of the first switching means in response   to the gating signals. A more detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention is given in the following description and accompanying drawing of which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a prior art SCR deflection system;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of an SCR deflection system of the type shown in FIG. 1 including a gating circuit embodying the invention;
FIG. 3 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of one type of a regulator system which employs an SCR as a control device and which is suitable for use with the SCR deflection system of FIG.2;
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of another type of a regulator system suitable for use with the deflection circuit of FIG. 2; and
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of still another type of a regulator system suitable for use with the SCR deflection system of FIG. 2.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG.   1 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a prior art   deflection system of the retrace driven type similar to that disclosed   in U.S. Pat. No. 3,452,244. This system includes a commutating switch   12, comprising a silicon controlled rectifier (SCR) 14 and an oppositely   poled damper diode 16. The commutating switch 12 is coupled between a   winding 18a of an input choke 18 and ground. The other terminal of   winding 18a is coupled to a source of direct current voltage (B+) by   means of a regulator network 20 which controls the energy stored in the   deflection circuit 10 when the commutating switch is off, during an   interval T3 to T0' as shown in curve 21 which is a plot of the voltage   level at the anode of SCR 14 during the deflection cycle. A damping   network comprising a series combination of a resistor 22 and a capacitor   23 is coupled in parallel with commutating switch 12 and serves to   reduce any ringing effects produced by the switching of commutating   switch 12. Commutating switch 12 is coupled through a commutating coil   24, a commutating capacitor 25 and a trace switch 26 to ground. Trace   switch 26 comprises an SCR 28 and an oppositely poled damper diode 30.   An auxiliary capacitor 32 is coupled between the junction of coil 24 and   capacitor 25 and ground. A series combination of a horizontal   deflection winding 34 and an S-shaping capacitor 36 are coupled in   parallel with trace switch 26. Also, a series combination of a primary   winding 38a of a horizontal output transformer 38 and a DC blocking   capacitor 40 are coupled in parallel with trace switch 26. 
A   secondary of high voltage winding 38b of transformer 38 produces   relatively large amplitude flyback pulses during the retrace interval of   each deflection cycle. This interval exists between T1 and T2 of curve   41 which is a plot of the current through windings 34 and 38a during  the  deflection cycle. These flyback pulses are applied to a high  voltage  multiplier (not shown) or other suitable means for producing  direct  current high voltage for use as the ultor voltage of a kinescope  (not  shown). An auxiliary winding 38c of transformer 38 is coupled to a high voltage sensing and control circuit 42 which transforms the level of flyback pulses into a pulse width modulated signal. The control circuit 42 is coupled to the regulator network 20.
A horizontal oscillator 44 is coupled to the gate electrode of commutating SCR 14 and produces a pulse during each deflection cycle slightly before the end of the trace interval at T0 of curve 21 to turn on SCR 14 to initiate the commutating interval. The commutating interval occurs between T0 and T3 of curve 21. A resonant waveshaping network 46 comprising a series combination of a capacitor 48 and an inductor 50 coupled between a winding 18b of input choke 18 and the gate electrode of trace SCR 28 and a damping resistor 52 coupled between the junction of capacitor 48 and inductor 50 and ground shapes the signal developed at winding 18b (i.e. voltage waveform 53) to form a gating signal voltage waveform 55 to enable SCR 28 for conduction during the second half of the trace interval occurring between T2 and T1' of curve 41.
The   regulator network 20, when of a type to be described in conjunction   with FIG. 3, operates in such a manner that current through winding 18a   of input choke 18 during an interval between T4 and T5 (region A) of   curves 21, 53 and 55 is interrupted for a period of time the duration of   which is determined by the signal produced by the high voltage sensing   and control circuit 42. During the interruption of current through   winding 18a a zero voltage level is developed by winding 18b as shown in   interval T4 to T5 of curve 53. The resonant waveshaping circuit 46   produces the shaped waveform 55 which undesirably retains a slump in   region A corresponding to the notch A of waveform 53. The slump in   waveform 55 applied to SCR 28 occurs in a region where the anode of SCR   28 becomes positive and where SCR 28 must be switched on to maintain a   uniform production of the current waveshape in the horizontal  deflection  winding 34 as shown in curve 41. The less positive amplitude  current  occurring at region A of waveform 55 may result in  insufficient gating  current for SCR 28 and may cause erratic  performance resulting in an  unsatisfactory raster. 
FIG.   2 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of a deflection   system 60 embodying the invention. Those elements which perform the same   function in FIG. 2 as in FIG. 1 are labeled with the same reference   numerals. FIG. 2 differs from FIG. 1 essentially in that the signal to   enable SCR 28 derived from sampling a portion of the voltage across   commutating switch 12 rather than a voltage developed by winding 18b   which is a function of the voltage across winding 18a of input choke 18   as in FIG. 1. This change eliminates the slump in the enabling signal   during the interval T4 to T5 as shown in curve 64 since the voltage   across the commutating switch 12 is not adversely effected by the   regulator network 20 operation. A series combination of resistor 22, capacitor 23 and a capacitor 62 is coupled in parallel with commutating switch 12, one terminal of capacitor 62 being coupled to ground. The junction of capacitors 23 and 62 is coupled to the gate electrode of SCR 28 by means of the inductor 50. The resistor 52 is coupled in parallel with capacitor 62.
Capacitors 23 and 62 form a capacitance voltage divider which provides a suitable portion of the voltage across commutating switch 12 for gating SCR 28 via inductor 50. The magnitude of the voltage at the junction of capacitors 23 and 62 is typically 25 to 35 volts. It can, therefore, be seen that the ratio of values of capacitors 23 and 62 will vary depending on the B+ voltage utilized to energize the deflection system. Capacitors 23 and 62 and inductor 50 form a resonant circuit tuned in a manner which provides for peaking of the curve 64 between T4 and T5. This peaking effect further enhances gating of SCR 28 between T4 and T5.
Since the waveshape of the voltage across commutating switch 12 (curve 21) is relatively independent of the type of regulator system employed in conjunction with the deflection system, the curve 64 also is independent of the type of regulator system.
When commutating switch 12 switches off during the interval T3 to T0' curve 21, the voltage across capacitor 62 increases and the voltage at the gate electrode of SCR 28 increases as shown in curve 64. As will be noted, no slump of curve 64 occurs between T3 and T5 because there is no interruption of the voltage across commutating switch 12.





FIG.   3 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of one type of a   regulator system which may be used in conjunction with the invention. B+   is supplied through a regulator network 20 which comprises an SCR 66   and an oppositely poled diode 68. The diode is poled to provide for   conduction of current from B+ to the horizontal deflection circuit 60   via winding 18a of input choke 18. Current flows through the diode   during the period T3 to T4 of curve 21 FIG. 1 after which current tries   to flow through the SCR 66 from the horizontal deflection circuit to B+   since the commutating capacitor 25 is charged to a voltage higher than   B+. The horizontal deflection circuit 60 produces a flyback pulse in winding 38a of the flyback transformer 38 which is coupled to winding 38c. The magnitude of the pulse on winding 38c determines how long the signal required to switch SCR 66 on is delayed after T4 curve 21 FIG. 1. If the flyback pulse is greater than desirable, the SCR 66 turns on sooner than if the flyback pulse is less than desirable and provides a discharge path for current in commutating capacitor 25 back to the B+ supply. In this manner a relatively constant amplitude flyback pulse is maintained.
FIG.   4 is a schematic diagram, partially in block form, of another   well-known type of a regulator system which may be used in conjunction   with the invention shown in FIG. 2. B+ is coupled through winding 18a of   input choke 18 and through a series combination of windings 70a and  70b  of a saturable reactor 70 and a parallel combination of a diode 72  and a  resistor 74 to the horizontal deflection circuit 60. Diode 72 is  poled  to conduct current from the horizontal deflection circuit 60 to  B+. Flyback pulse variations are obtained from winding 38c of the horizontal output transformer 38 and applied to a voltage divider comprising resistors 76, 78 and 80 of the high voltage sensing and control circuit 42. A portion of the pulse produced by winding 38c is selected by the position of the wiper terminal on potentiometer 78 and coupled to the base electrode of a transistor 82 by means of a zener diode 84. The emitter electrode of transistor 82 is grounded and a DC stabilization resistor 85 is coupled in parallel with the base-emitter junction of transistor 82. When the pulse magnitude on winding 38c exceeds a level which results in forward biasing the base-emitter junction of transistor 82, current flows from B+ through a resistor 86, a winding 70c of saturable reactor 70 and transistor 82 to ground. Due to the exponential increase of current in winding 70c during the period of conduction of transistor 82, the duration of conduction of transistor 82 determines the magnitude of current flowing in winding 70c and thus the total inductance of windings 70a and 70b. The current in winding 70c is sustained during the remaining deflection period by means of a diode 88 coupled in parallel with winding 70c and poled not to conduct current from B+ to the collector electrode of transistor 82. A capacitor 90 coupled to the cathode of diode 88 provides a bypass for B+. Windings 70a and 70b are in parallel with input reactor 18a and thereby affect the total input inductance of the deflection circuit and thereby controls the transfer of energy to the deflection circuit. The dotted waveforms shown in conjunction with a curve 21' indicate variations from a nominal waveform provided at the input of horizontal deflection circuit 60 by the windings 70a and 70b.



FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of yet another type of a regulator system which may be used in conjunction with the invention. B+ is coupled through a winding 92a and a winding 92b of a saturable reactor to the horizontal deflection circuit 60. Windings 92a and 92b are used to replace the input choke 18 shown in FIGS. 1 and 2 while also providing for a regulating function corresponding to that provided by regulating network 20.
Flyback pulse variations are obtained from winding 38c and applied to the high voltage sensing and control circuit 42 as in FIG. 4. Current flows from B+ through resistor 86, a winding 92c and transistor 82 to ground. As in FIG. 4 the duration of the conduction of transistor 82 determines the energy stored in winding 92c and thus the total inductance of windings 92a and 92b which control the amount of energy transferred to the deflection circuit during each horizontal deflection cycle. The variations in waveforms of curve 21', shown in conjunction with FIG. 4, are also provided at the input of horizontal deflection circuit 60 by windings 92a and 92b.
For various reasons including cost or performance, a manufacturer may wish to utilize a particular one of the regulators illustrated in FIGS. 3, 4 and 5. Regardless of the choice, the gating circuit according to the invention may be utilized therewith advantageously by providing improved performance and the possibility of cost savings by eliminating taps or extra windings on the wound components which heretofore normally provided a source of SCR gating waveforms.





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