The NORDMENDE IMPERATOR COLOR 25 is a 26 inches color television with 12 programs and ultrasonic remote control system.
Was featuring the PHILIPS 20AX CRT TUBE FAMILY and it's last television with CHASSIS F4 replaced with F5.The PHILIPS 20AX system was introduced in Europe in 1975 as the first self converging picture tube/deflection coil, combination for 110° degree deflection and screen sizes up to 26". The system is based on the automatic convergence principle discovered by Haantjes and Lubben of Philips Research Laboratory more than 20 years ago. It makes use of an in-line gun array in conjunction with a specially designed saddle type deflection coil. Residual small tolerance errors are compensated by a simple dynamic four-pole system. The tube is 2 cm shorter than conventional 110° Degree tubes and has a standard 36.5 mm neck in order to obtain good color selection. A slotted mask is used in combination with a stripe-structure screen. Picture sharpness is ensured by an astigmatic electron gun
The
new tube, to be known as the 20AX, has been developed by PHILIPS in
conjunction with the parent Philips / Mullard organisation and will be
produced by several Philips subsidiary companies on the Continent as
well as by PHILIPS in the UK. PHILIPS envisage quantity production of
the tube by 1976, mainly for export at first, with large-scale
production for UK set - makers starting in 1977. The tube has been
developed as "probably the final phase in the design of the 110°
shadowmask tube". Its main
features are the use of three guns mounted horizontally in line, the
use of a shadow - mask with slots instead of circular holes, and a
screen with the phosphors deposited in vertical stripes instead of as a
pattern of dot triads. It seems therefore that the days of the present
delta gun shadowmask tube are now numbered, though considerable
production will have to continue for many years to provide replacement
tubes for the millions of colour sets already in use. So far as the
viewer is concerned however it is important to appreciate the time scale
involved (see above) and the reasons for the development of the new
tube. There is nothing wrong with the type of shadow - mask tube we have
known since the beginning of colour TV: it is able to provide superb
pictures. But in its 110° form it does require rather a lot of
scan/convergence correction circuitry. If this can be reduced by means
of an alternative approach
as
with the 20AX tube considerable benefits in set production and
servicing will be obtained. This has been the aim behind the development
of the new tube, and the demonstration tube we have seen operating with
its associated deflection yoke and circuitry gave a picture every bit
as good as we have come to expect from the present "conventional"
approach to colour tube design. There are now four colour tubes with in
-line guns, the Sony Trinitron (the first to come along), the RCA /Mazda
PIL tube, the Toshiba RIS tube and now the PHILIPS 20AX. It is
interesting to compare them. The Trinitron is a 90° narrow neck (29mm)
tube. It differs from the others in using an aperture grill (slits from
top to bottom) instead of a mask behind the screen to shadow the beams
and a tube face which is substantially flat in the vertical plane. On
the domestic market it is used exclusively in Sony sets and certainly
represented a break through in simplifying the convergence circuitry and
setting up adjustments required. The Toshiba RIS (rectangular flare,
in-line guns, slotted shadowmask) tube has now turned up in the UK in
the recently introduced 18in. Sharp Model C1831H. Its most distinctive
feature is the rectangu- lar instead of conical tube flare and the
rectangular semi -toroidal scanning yoke which is used with this. It is a
110° thick neck (36mm) tube. The convergence arrangements are fairly
simple. The most interesting comparisons however are between the PI tube
and the 20AX. The first is a 90° tube of the narrow neck variety and
features a toroidal yoke which is cemented to the tube- thus if either
is faulty the entire tube/yoke assembly must be replaced. The great
advantage is that no dynamic convergence adjustments or circuitry are
required. It is at present limited to sizes up to 20in. and the
designers say that it is not intended as a successor to the standard
shadowmask tube above this size. Its depth compares with 110° tubes
because of the simplified gun structure used. The PHILIPS 20AX tube
differs from it in several respects. First it is basically a 110° tube
which can be produced in a whole range
of sizes production of 18, 22 and 26in. versions is proposed so that
set makers can use it with a single chassis for models of various
sizes. Secondly it uses saddlewound deflection coils which are separate
from though accurately aligned
with the tube. And thirdly it is a thick neck tube. Unlike the PI tube
in which all the gun electrodes except the cathodes are common to all
guns the electrodes of each gun in the 20AX are separately available at
the base. This means that in addition to RGB drive to the cathodes the
grids are available for blanking and beam limiting and the first anodes
for background control setting in the normal manner. In fact PHILIPS
emphasised that the new tube is entirely compatible with existing colour
set techniques though the whole convergence system is greatly
simplified. The basic idea behind these in line gun, slotted mask tubes
is that by mounting the guns horizontally in line the convergence errors
are confined to the horizontal plane and by applying an astigmatic
deflection field these errors are cancelled. This means that a fair
amount of cunning in the design of the deflection yoke is required. A
saddlewound yoke is more efficient than a toroidal yoke since the
deflection fields are totally enclosed.
In comparison to current 110° PHILIPS tubes the 20AX requires much the same horizontal deflection power but about twice the vertical deflection power (which can be obtained without trouble from modern semiconductor devices). The use of a separate yoke with a tube of this type means that some dynamic convergence controls are still necessary, in order to match the assemblies. PHILIPS refer to these as "tolerance adjustments" rather than "dynamic convergence controls". About seven are required at present though further work is being done on this and by the time sets with the new tube appear we can expect some reduction. A single pincushion transductor is required instead of the two needed with 110° shadowmask tubes of the present variety. In comparison the PIL tube requires no dynamic convergence adjustments, only some simple tube neck magnets for static setting up. It is a little less efficient however because of the type of yoke employed. Whatever else happens there is no doubt that the vast majority of colour tubes fitted to TVC sets come 1977 will be of the in line gun, slotted mask, vertical phosphor stripe variety. Two further points made by PHILIPS at their demonstration : first, this type of tube requires less degaussing so that there are worthwhile savings in the amount of copper required for the degaussing coils: secondly their new tube, and in fact all PHILIPS monochrome tubes and shortly their colour tubes as well, will incorporate "instant on" guns which come into operation about five seconds after the set is switched on instead of the 30 seconds or more taken by present tubes. This instant on feature is based on a new heater/cathode assembly in which the use of mica insulators has been avoided.
Meanwhile we understand that in addition to RCA and, in the UK, Mazda, ITT and Videocolor SA are to produce PIL tubes. Whilst congratulations all round was appropriate on the successful development of these tubes it does seem a pity that was about to enter for the first time an era of non compatible colour c.r.t.s.
Was advertised with his 25 inches color screen with reduced deepness claim at the time.
(To see the Internal Chassis Just click on Older Post Button on bottom page, that's simple !)
.........................1967-1977 10 YEARS of color engineering, industrial, administrative and political factors all became hopelessly intertwined in the long but eventually unsuccessful attempt to establish a single colour - encoding system for Europe. From 1962-67 the struggle oscillated wildly between the three main systems - the American NTSC, the French SEC AM and the German PAL. There were also many variations within the SECAM and PAL systems, plus some outsiders such as NIIR, FAM, TSC, SEQUIN, LEP, and counter ideas such as the Post Office's pilot -tone reference system for NTSC, suggested by Dr N. W. J. Lewis in 1964. In February 1965 the official European delegation went to the CCIR Study Group XI meetings at Vienna firmly committed to support NTSC - yet before the end of that year it had swung over equally firmly to support PAL. Indeed for much of 1964 and 1965 the only public support in the Europeans for either PAL or SECAM came from a few technical journalists and the small engineering team at ABC, Teddington. At that period the British industry, through BREMA, was solidly behind NTSC. The BBC's then Director of Engineering, Sir Francis McLean, wrote in March 1965 that "the NTSC system is much to be preferred". The PMG made a statement in the House of Commons on February 3, 1965 in favour of NTSC. Yet today almost everyone in British broadcasting circles sincerely believes that the European made the right choice in opting for PAL. Even in the United States, the birthplace of NTSC, one finds a belief that European television benefits from having chosen PAL or SECAM, though clearly many of the original problems in handling and, particularly, in tape recording NTSC have now been largely overcome. Why did it take skilled engineers and administrators so long to come to what, with hindsight, may seem the obvious choice? And why we were still left with all three systems in general use?
Nordmende was a manufacturer of entertainment electronics based in Bremen, Germany.
The original company, Radio H. Mende & Co, was founded in 1923 by Otto Hermann Mende (1885-1940) in Dresden. Following the destruction of the plant during the bombing raids in 1945, Martin Mende (the founder's son) created a new company in Bremen in 1947, in a former Focke-Wulf plant, under the name North German Mende Broadcast GmbH. The name was subsequently changed to Nordmende: subsequently the company became one of the prominent German manufacturers of radios, televisions, tape recorders and record players in the 1950s and 1960s.
In
the 1970s, Nordmende televisions were renowned for their innovative
chassis, and for the rigorous testing and quality control of their
finished products. Both created high costs, however, which soon proved a
competitive disadvantage when the price of colour televisions began to plunge.
In 1969, Mende's sons took over the company, and in 1977 a majority shareholding was sold to the French Thomson Brandt company and the chassis remains the original NordMende until CHASSIS F9. The
following year, the family sold their remaining shares to Thomson.
In the 1980s, the factories in Bremen were closed, Nordmende becoming
purely a Thomson trademark (Starting from chassis F10 F11 they're all THOMSON).In the 1990s, the name Nordmende was used with decreasing frequency, and it eventually disappeared in favour of the Thomson name. In 2005 Videocon Group acquired all cathode ray tube activities from Thomson. This led to the creation of VDC Technologies, which manufactures TV sets using the Nordmende brand under licence from Thomson.
The Nordmende brand name was relaunched in Ireland in September 2008 by the KAL Group. Although Nordmende was well known for its televisions throughout Ireland during the 1970s and 1980s, the company bought the rights to the name and launched a range of white goods including fridges, freezers, washing machines, and dishwashers, alongside a revamped range of flat-screen TVs and stereos.
NORDMENDE HISTORY IN GERMAN:
Die Vorkriegsgeschichte findet sich unter Mende. Nach dem Totalverlust in Dresden gründet Martin Mende (30.12.1898-1982) unter Mitwirkung von Hermann Weber am 26. August 1947 [FT5901] in Bremen-Hemelingen die Norddeutsche Mende-Rundfunk GmbH.
Die ersten Gehäuse liefert ein Tischler in Achim gegen Kompensation von fünf Gehäusen zu einem Rundfunkgerät. Der frühere Mende-Konstrukteur, Obering. Heer zeichnet wieder für die Geräte verantwortlich [FT49??].
Ab 27. Juli 1948 liefert die neue, zuerst 18 und bald 60 Personen umfassende Firma auf Grund von Währungsreform, Krediten und Zulieferverträgen die neue Radioproduktion.
Das Regime in Ostdeutschland lässt den Namen Mende nicht zu, so dass Martin Mende mit grafischen Konstruktionen im Zusammenhang mit «Nord» an seinen Vorkriegserfolg anschliesst.
Die Hallen der ehemaligen Focke-Wulf AG beim Bahnhof Seebaldsbrück dienen als Werkstätten. 1950 beschäftigt das Unternehmen 700, 1959 schon 3500 und im Zenit 6300 Personen.
1950 beginnt die Firma mit UKW-, 1953 mit Fernseh- und 1954 mit Mess- und Prüfgeräten. Gegen Ende der 50er Jahre heisst die Firma Norddeutsche Mende Rundfunk KG [RP7901].
Nachdem sich Nordmende bislang nicht mit Magnettongeräten befasst hat, bringt das Werk 1958 das erste deutsche Heim-Tonbandgerät mit drei Motoren auf den Markt. Allerdings dominieren auf diesem Sektor eindeutig andere Firmen wie AEG/Telefunken und Grundig. Von Nordmende kommen jeweils nur ein bis zwei Geräte (1960 keines) in die Kataloge. Dafür hat die Firma Erfolg mit einem anderen Neueinstieg:
1958 stellt Nordmende mit «Mambo» ihr erstes Reisegerät vor - aber nicht «das erste deutsche, serienmässig hergestellte und volltransistorisierte Koffergerät», wie man aus einer Quelle nachlesen kann. Danach wird Nordmende in Deutschland auf dem Sektor Reisegeräte besonders stark, obwohl sie keine Röhren-Koffer baute. Immerhin kosten die in «Mambo» verwendeten 8 Halbleiter dann im Einzelhandel DM 98.70, während für die vier D-Röhren der 90er-Serie - auch zum Katalogpreis - etwa DM 35.- auszugeben wären. Preis des ganzen Gerätes: DM 189.- plus zwei Flachbatterien von 4,5 V.
Bis 1969 gibt es ca. 92 Modelle der tragbaren Radios (Koffer- bzw. «Handradios», d.h. «Hand held radios»). Beispielsweise finden sich im Katalog 1961/62 [448] je 11 Tischradios und Radiomöbel sowie 8 Modelle von Reiseradios. 17 verschiedene Fernsehmodelle zeigen dagegen, wo in jener Zeit der Erfolg zu holen war.
Gemäss [FT7901] liegt Nordmende während kurzer Zeit mit der sogenannten «Tippomatik-Bedienung» sogar technisch vorne. Siehe auch Philips etc.
Auch Konzertschränke scheinen Ende der 50er bis Anfang 60er Jahre eine tragende Säule für Nordmende zu sein. Dabei verwendet die Firma immer wieder gleiche Namen wie «Cabinet», «Caruso», «Casino», «Cosima» sowie «Arabella» und «Isobella» mit wechselnden Zusatz-Nummern oder den Zusatz «Stereo», z.B. in den Jahren 1959 und 1960/61.
Im März 1967 nimmt das Werk die Produktion von Farbfernsehgeräten auf. Zum Firmenjubiläum erscheint eine Gerätereihe mit der Bezeichnung 'Goldene 20'. 1969 übernehmen die Mende-Söhne Karl und Hermann die Geschäftsführung.
1977 führt der verschärfte Wettbewerb zum Verkauf der Mehrheit an den französischen Konzern Thomson-Brandt; die Familie Mende zieht sich anschliessend ganz aus dem Unternehmen zurück. Martin Mende stirbt 1982.
Weblinks:
Commons: Nordmende – Sammlung von Bildern, Videos und AudiodateienTote Marke NORDMENDE – Verblasster Stolz. Artikel im Manager-Magazin
Ein neues Programm. Artikel in der Zeit
Fernseher: Inder produzieren neue Nordmende. Artikel bei itespresso.de
Videocon produziert Plasmaschirme für Nordmende. Artikel im pressetext.de
Einzelnachweise
Spectra Color Studio und Spectra SK2 Color de Luxe Studio auf radiomuseum.orgMarke Nordmende mit Digital- und Internetradios zurück, teltarif.de, Artikel vom 2. September 2017.
Company profile. Phillar, archiviert vom Original am 6. März 2008; abgerufen am 26. April 2013 (englisch).
Broschüre – Sprachmanager24. Abgerufen am 5. Januar 2015.
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