








CRT TUBE TELEFUNKEN A66-540X 30AX SYSTEM.

30AX              is a new in-line color TV display system with 110  deflection       angle     and   interchangeable tubes and yokes. It is  based on  the      production       experience gained with the 20AX  system  introduced  in     19741,2,3)  and  the     results of further   investigation in the  field     of tube  technology  and     deflection   yoke design. For the  tube,  this    meant a  new  reference   system,     an internal magnetic   correction   ring  and an   improved gun     design. For   the yoke, the   most important    elements are a   new     "flangeless" winding     technology, a change in    the shape of the     windings   at the screen   side of   the line    deflection coil and the   use   of field   shapers   embedded in the      deflection coil.
A deflector for a cathode ray tube (called herein "CRT"), and more particularly a stator type deflector in which a plurality of slots for windings are formed in the inner surface of a tubular core and deflecting coils are positioned in these slots.
The deflection Joke is a HIGH PRECISION MONO TOROIDAL TYPE.
PHILIPS 30AX SYSTEM BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
This             invention relates to 
self-converging  color picture tube or         kinescope     display systems that do not  require precise   transverse,  or      tilt,     alignment between the  deflection yoke and   the electron     beams   of the     kinescope. 
self-converging  color picture tube or         kinescope     display systems that do not  require precise   transverse,  or      tilt,     alignment between the  deflection yoke and   the electron     beams   of the     kinescope. 
Color              television kinescopes or picture tubes create color images   by         causing    electrons to impinge upon phosphors having           different-wavelength    emissions. Normally, phosphors having red,   green         and blue-light emission    are used, grouped into trios or    triads    of     phosphor areas, with each    triad containing one    phosphor  area   of   each   of the three colors. 
In              the kinescope, the phosphors of each of the three colors  are         excited    by  an electron beam which is intended to impinge   upon        phosphors    emitting  only one color. Thus, each electron   beam  may  be      identified by    the color  emitted by the phosphor   which  the  beam is      intended to   excite.  The area  impinged on  by  each   electron beam  is     relatively large    compared with a    phosphor   triad, and at any    position   on the screen,   each  beam   excites a    particular color    phosphor in   each of several   triads.    The three   electron  beams are    generated by   three electron guns     located  in a   neck portion of  the    kinescope   opposite the   viewing  screen    formed  by the phosphors.  The    electron   guns are   oriented so  that   the   undeflected beams  leave  the  gun      assembly in converging  paths   directed   towards the  viewing     screen. For    the viewing  screen to   display a   faithful  color     reproduction of a   scene  it  is  necessary that  the beam    position     relative to the   kinescope  be   adjusted for  producing color      purity   and static beam    convergence  at the  center of  the screen.    The     purity adjustment    involves  causing each of the  red,   green   and blue     beams to  excite   only  its respective phosphor.  This   is   accomplished   by    the shadow    mask. The shadow mask is a   screen or  grill   having    large   numbers  of   perforations  through  which the  electron beams     may  pass. Each      perforation  is in a  fixed position  relative to  each    triad  of  color      phosphor  areas. The electron  beams pass  through  one  or   more of   the      perforations and fall upon  the  appropriate  color     phosphors based   upon     their directions of   incidence. Color   purity    depends upon a  high    order   of accuracy  in  the placement  of  the    phosphor  triads relative to    the     perforations and the  apparent    source   of the electron beams. 
Static              convergence involves causing the three beams to converge at     one          scanning spot at or near the center of the viewing   screen.       Convergence      at the center of the screen may be   accomplished by   the     use of a  static     convergence assembly   mounted relative to   the  neck    of the  kinescope  and    adjusted or   magnetized to  produce  a  static    magnetic  field which   causes     the three beams  to  converge  at the    center of the  viewing     screen. 
In              order to form a two-dimensional image, the luminescent spot         excited    on   the viewing screen by the three converged  electron    beams     must be     scanned  both horizontally and  vertically over  the     viewing   screen to     form a  luminescent  raster area. This is      accomplished by   means of     magnetic   fields produced by a  deflection     yoke mounted  upon  the neck of      the  kinescope. The  deflection    yoke  deflects the   electron beams  with       substantially independent     horizontal and   vertical  deflection   systems.     Horizontal    deflection  of the electron    beams is  provided by  coils of  the       yoke which  produce a  magnetic   field  having mainly      vertically-directed    field   lines. The magnetic    field intensity is      varied with time at a      relatively high rate.    Vertical deflection    of   the electron beams  is     accomplished by  coils   producing  mainly  a     horizontally-directed  magnetic    field  which   varies  with time  at a     relatively low rate. A  permeable     magnetic   core  is   associated  with the   yoke coils. The  conductors  of the    coils     may  enclose the  core to  form  a toroidal   deflection winding, or    the      conductors  may form  saddle  coils  which  do not enclose the   core. 
The              kinescope viewing screen is relatively flat. The electrons   of      each       electron beam will traverse a greater distance when      deflected     towards     the edge of the viewing screen than when      directed toward   the   center.  Due    to the separation of the      electron guns, this may    result  in a    separation  of the landing      points of the three  electron   beams  when near    or  deflected      towards the edge of the  screen. In   addition,  prior art          almost-uniform magnetic deflection  fields   caused the  electron beams      to     be overconverged when  deflected away   from the  center of   the    screen.     These effects  combine to cause the   light spots  of   the    three beams at     points on  the viewing screen away   from  the    center   to be separated.  This    is  known as misconvergence    and   results   in  color fringes about  the   edges   of the displayed      images. A  certain   amount of misconvergence   is    tolerable, but      complete  separation  of  the three illuminated  spots  is     generally   not    acceptable.   Misconvergence may be measured  as a   separation      of the    ideally   superimposed red, green and blue   lines of a    crosshatch       pattern of   lines appearing on the  screen  when an    appropriate test      signal   is  applied to the  picture tube.  Each of   the  three  electron   beams    scans a    raster, which may be    identified by its   color. Thus, a    green    raster  is  ordinarily    scanned by the center   electron beam,    and  the   outside  beams  scan    red and blue rasters.  The  crosshatch     pattern is   formed in   each  of   the red, green and  blue  rasters.  The    crosshatch    pattern   outlines  the  raster with  vertical and    horizontal   lines,  and    also  includes  other   vertically and      horizontally-directed  lines,  some of    which  pass  through  the  center    of  the raster. 
TELEFUNKEN CATHODE ARRANGEMENT AND CATHODE-RAY TUBE HAVING SUCH A CATHODE ARRANGEMENT:
In a cathode-ray tube cathode arrangement having a cup-shaped control electrode provided with an aperture in its end wall, a cup-shaped cathode sleeve having an end face provided with emission material and arranged in the control electrode with its end face adjacent the aperture, and a disc of insulating material arranged within the control electrode to support the cathode sleeve therein, with the end face of the cathode sleeve spaced from the apertured wall of the control electrode by a suitable spacing means, the ceramic disc is provided with a plurality of wedge surfaces and associated recesses to permit the disc to be inserted into the control electrode past a plurality of projections formed on the inner wall of the control electrode and to then be turned so as to become removably wedged into place between the spacing means and the projections.
1.     A cathode arrangement comprising, in combination:                                           2. A cathode arrangement as claimed in claim 1    wherein said disc   is of a ceramic material and has a plurality of    wedge surfaces each  with  an associated recess, and there are a    plurality of projections  each  associated with a respective wedge    surface.                                         3. A cathode    arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein there are   an equal number    of said projections and said wedge surfaces.                                            4. A cathode arrangement as claimed in claim 3, wherein    there are   two wedge surfaces, each with an associated recess, and  two    projections  which are distributed symmetrically around the     circumference of said  disc and said control electrode, respectively.                                            5. A cathode arrangement as    claimed in claim 3, wherein there are   three wedge surfaces, each with    an associated recess, and three   projections which are distributed    symmetrically around the circumference   of said disc and said control    electrode, respectively.                                         6. A    cathode-ray tube having a cathode arrangement as defined in   claim 2,    wherein said cathode arrangement is provided with an equal   number of    said projections and said wedge surfaces.                                            7. A cathode-ray as claimed in claim 6, wherein said tube  is a    television picture tube.                                        8. A   cathode-ray tube as claimed in claim 7, having three    electron-beam   generating systems each provided with said cathode    arrangement.                                         9. A cathode-ray  tube as claimed in   claim 8, wherein each cathode   arrangement is  provided with two wedge   surfaces, each with an  associated  recess,  and two projections which   are distributed  symmetrically around  the  circumference of said disc   and said control  electrode, respectively.                                           10. A cathode-ray tube as  claimed in claim 8, wherein each    cathode  arrangement is provided  with three wedge surfaces, each with an     associated recess, and three  projections which are distributed     symmetrically around the  circumference of said disc and said control     electrode, respectively
.                                                         
Description:
The invention relates to a cathode arrangement having a      cup-shaped cathode sleeve which is provided at the end with emission      material and which is held inside a cup-shaped control electrode by      means of an insulating disc which preferably consists of ceramic, the      insulating disc being presses, by wedging, against one or more   shoulders    provided in the control electrode.
In cathode-ray tubes, particularly oscillograph tubes and television picture tubes, the cathode consists of a cup-shaped cathode sleeve of metal, in the interior of which there is provided an electrical heating element and on the outer end of which there is provided an emission material. The insulated mounting of such a cathode sleeve is generally effected by means of a ceramic disc which is secured in a cup-shaped control electrode (Wehnelt Cylinder). In the center of the end face, the control electrode has an aperture for the passage of electrons which is opposite the emission surface and separated therefrom by a short distance. The short distance between the emission surface and the control electrode aperture is usually maintained by a spacer having a shoulder and inserted in the control electrode, or by shoulders, for example in the form of an annular constriction provided in the control electrode, against which the insulating disc is pressed with the cathode sleeve secured in its central aperture. The pressing of the insulating disc against the shoulder determining the spacing is effected, as is known, by pressing in beads, bending tongues at an angle, twisting tongues or inserting resilient clips.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the object of the present invention to provide a novel cathode arrangement of the aforesaid kind which renders simple and reliable holding of the cathode sleeve possible inside the control electrode and which permits replacement of the cathode sleeve inside the control electrode in a simple manner.
According to the invention, it is proposed that projections should be provided on the inner wall of the control electrode and that the insulating disc should have wedge surfaces which gradually vary the thickness thereof in the circumferential direction and which, on rotation of the insulating disc, cause a wedgelike locking thereof between the shoulder and the projections.
The mode of securing the insulating disc inside the control electrode according to the invention has the advantage that the cathode sleeve together with the insulating disc can be removed from the control electrode again at any time and replaced by another one. The replacement of the cathode is particularly important when a completely or partially manufactured electron tube proves unservicable and has to be reopened in order to remove the damage causing the disturbance. This damage may have occurred to the cathode itself or elsewhere, for example to the luminescent screen of a television picture tube. Since contact with air generally damages the formed cathode, the whole electrode system would have to be thrown away if the cathode could not be replaced. The possibility of replacing the cathode is therefore particularly desirable if the electrode system is extensive and expensive. A preferred use for the cathode arrangement according to the invention is therefore in television picture tubes and more particularly in color television picture tubes. The electrode systems of color television picture tubes consist of a plurality of, preferably three, electron-beam generating systems, and are relatively expensive, so that replacement of the three cathodes in the event of repair to the tube saves considerable expense because the remaining cathode system can be used again after insertion of new cathodes. Additional electrodes for producing convergence of the three electron beams (convergence electrode) are generally secured to the electrode systems for color television picture tubes, and these consist partially of expensive materials and would have to be thrown away with the electrode system if replacement of the three cathodes were impossible. The invention therefore leads to particular advantages in conjunction with color television picture tubes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGS. 1 to 5 show an example of a preferred embodiment of the invention in various views, or different parts thereof.
FIG. 1 shows a view from below of the cathode arrangement according to the invention;
FIG. 2 shows a cross section therethrough;
FIG. 3 shows a side view thereof;
FIG. 4 shows a side view partially in section and
FIG. 5 shows a portion of a cross section of the cathode arrangement according to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
T
he      circular cylindrical control electrode 1, also called a Wehnelt      Cylinder, consists in known manner of a cup-shaped structure, the end      face 5 of which has a central aperture 12 for the passage of the  beam.     Opposite the aperture 12 for the passage of electrons, with  short     spacing, is the emission layer 11 of the cup-shaped cathode  sleeve 2 in     the interior of which, an electrical heating element is  mounted with     insulation in the usual manner. The mounting of the  cathode sleeve 2     inside the cavity of the control electrode 1 is  effected with the aid  of    an insulating disc 6 consisting preferably  of ceramic. The  securing  of   the cathode sleeve 2 to the insulating  disc 6 is effected  in any  known   manner, with precision, so that the  emission surface 11  of the  cathode   sleeve 2 extends to a specific  extent over the area  10 of the   insulating  disc. In order to set a  defined spacing between  the end  face  of the  cathode sleeve coated  with emission material 11  and the  inner  face of  the end wall 5 of  the control electrode 1, a  spacing  ring 4 is  provided  which is  inserted in the control electrode  1 and  against which  there is   pressed the insulating disc 6.  Projections or  shoulders,  particularly  an  annular shoulder, could  naturally be  provided on the  cylindrical  inner  wall of the control  electrode 1  instead of the  spacing ring  4, and the  insulating disc 6  be pressed  against them.
According to the invention, projections 3 which extend inwards and which consist of mechanically produced impressions in the material, are provided at the inner wall of the control electrode 1. These projections are preferably impressed by means of a semicircular punch so that the material is partially torn as illustrated in FIG. 5.
Furthermore, the insulating disc according to the invention has inclined wedge surfaces 8 at its circumference. In particular, two or three of these wedge surfaces are provided which extend over a portion of the circumference. The wedge surfaces are provided by the fact that the thickness of the insulating disc varies gradually in the region of the wedge surfaces. The individual portions of wedge surface at the circumference of the insulating disc, together with the opposite plane face of the insulating disc, does form wedges to a certain extent. The wedge surfaces are provided at the face 9 in the insulating disc 6 remote from the emission surface 11. The face 10 of the insulating disc 6 adjacent to the emission surface 11 is plane, at least in the regions where the insulating disc rests on the shoulders or the distance ring 4, and is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the cathode sleeve 2.
The wedge surfaces according to the invention on the insulating disc may also be regarded as approximately sections of the surface of a screw thread. Associated with each wedge surface is a recess 7 in the insulating disc 6 starting at the circumference. The purpose of these recesses 7 is to enable the insulating disc to be inserted in the control electrode 1 which is effected in such a manner that the projections 3 on the control electrode slide through the recesses 7 during insertion. If, after the insertion of the insulating disc in the control electrode, this rests on a shoulder (not shown) or on the spacing ring 4, the ceramic disc is turned whereupon the wedge surfaces 8 engage below the projections 3 and as the turning continues, the insulating disc is firmly wedged between the spacing ring 4 and the projections 3. Each wedge surface in the insulating disc is associated with a projection on the control electrode. The arrangement of the wedge surfaces and of the projections is preferably effected so that they are distributed symmetrically round the circumference.
If     the  projections 3 extending inwards in the wall of the control     electrode of  the invention are formed in such a manner that the     material tears  partially as illustrated in FIG. 5, sharp edges are     obtained on these  projections 3 and, as a result of increased friction     against the  insulating disc, prevent this from being accidentally     loosened. As a  result of deliberate turning of the insulating disc 6  in    the opposite  direction, the insulating disc together with the   cathode   sleeve 2 can be  loosened again and removed from the control   electrode   1.   
In cathode-ray tubes, particularly oscillograph tubes and television picture tubes, the cathode consists of a cup-shaped cathode sleeve of metal, in the interior of which there is provided an electrical heating element and on the outer end of which there is provided an emission material. The insulated mounting of such a cathode sleeve is generally effected by means of a ceramic disc which is secured in a cup-shaped control electrode (Wehnelt Cylinder). In the center of the end face, the control electrode has an aperture for the passage of electrons which is opposite the emission surface and separated therefrom by a short distance. The short distance between the emission surface and the control electrode aperture is usually maintained by a spacer having a shoulder and inserted in the control electrode, or by shoulders, for example in the form of an annular constriction provided in the control electrode, against which the insulating disc is pressed with the cathode sleeve secured in its central aperture. The pressing of the insulating disc against the shoulder determining the spacing is effected, as is known, by pressing in beads, bending tongues at an angle, twisting tongues or inserting resilient clips.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is the object of the present invention to provide a novel cathode arrangement of the aforesaid kind which renders simple and reliable holding of the cathode sleeve possible inside the control electrode and which permits replacement of the cathode sleeve inside the control electrode in a simple manner.
According to the invention, it is proposed that projections should be provided on the inner wall of the control electrode and that the insulating disc should have wedge surfaces which gradually vary the thickness thereof in the circumferential direction and which, on rotation of the insulating disc, cause a wedgelike locking thereof between the shoulder and the projections.
The mode of securing the insulating disc inside the control electrode according to the invention has the advantage that the cathode sleeve together with the insulating disc can be removed from the control electrode again at any time and replaced by another one. The replacement of the cathode is particularly important when a completely or partially manufactured electron tube proves unservicable and has to be reopened in order to remove the damage causing the disturbance. This damage may have occurred to the cathode itself or elsewhere, for example to the luminescent screen of a television picture tube. Since contact with air generally damages the formed cathode, the whole electrode system would have to be thrown away if the cathode could not be replaced. The possibility of replacing the cathode is therefore particularly desirable if the electrode system is extensive and expensive. A preferred use for the cathode arrangement according to the invention is therefore in television picture tubes and more particularly in color television picture tubes. The electrode systems of color television picture tubes consist of a plurality of, preferably three, electron-beam generating systems, and are relatively expensive, so that replacement of the three cathodes in the event of repair to the tube saves considerable expense because the remaining cathode system can be used again after insertion of new cathodes. Additional electrodes for producing convergence of the three electron beams (convergence electrode) are generally secured to the electrode systems for color television picture tubes, and these consist partially of expensive materials and would have to be thrown away with the electrode system if replacement of the three cathodes were impossible. The invention therefore leads to particular advantages in conjunction with color television picture tubes.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIGS. 1 to 5 show an example of a preferred embodiment of the invention in various views, or different parts thereof.
FIG. 1 shows a view from below of the cathode arrangement according to the invention;
FIG. 2 shows a cross section therethrough;
FIG. 3 shows a side view thereof;
FIG. 4 shows a side view partially in section and
FIG. 5 shows a portion of a cross section of the cathode arrangement according to the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
T
he      circular cylindrical control electrode 1, also called a Wehnelt      Cylinder, consists in known manner of a cup-shaped structure, the end      face 5 of which has a central aperture 12 for the passage of the  beam.     Opposite the aperture 12 for the passage of electrons, with  short     spacing, is the emission layer 11 of the cup-shaped cathode  sleeve 2 in     the interior of which, an electrical heating element is  mounted with     insulation in the usual manner. The mounting of the  cathode sleeve 2     inside the cavity of the control electrode 1 is  effected with the aid  of    an insulating disc 6 consisting preferably  of ceramic. The  securing  of   the cathode sleeve 2 to the insulating  disc 6 is effected  in any  known   manner, with precision, so that the  emission surface 11  of the  cathode   sleeve 2 extends to a specific  extent over the area  10 of the   insulating  disc. In order to set a  defined spacing between  the end  face  of the  cathode sleeve coated  with emission material 11  and the  inner  face of  the end wall 5 of  the control electrode 1, a  spacing  ring 4 is  provided  which is  inserted in the control electrode  1 and  against which  there is   pressed the insulating disc 6.  Projections or  shoulders,  particularly  an  annular shoulder, could  naturally be  provided on the  cylindrical  inner  wall of the control  electrode 1  instead of the  spacing ring  4, and the  insulating disc 6  be pressed  against them.According to the invention, projections 3 which extend inwards and which consist of mechanically produced impressions in the material, are provided at the inner wall of the control electrode 1. These projections are preferably impressed by means of a semicircular punch so that the material is partially torn as illustrated in FIG. 5.
Furthermore, the insulating disc according to the invention has inclined wedge surfaces 8 at its circumference. In particular, two or three of these wedge surfaces are provided which extend over a portion of the circumference. The wedge surfaces are provided by the fact that the thickness of the insulating disc varies gradually in the region of the wedge surfaces. The individual portions of wedge surface at the circumference of the insulating disc, together with the opposite plane face of the insulating disc, does form wedges to a certain extent. The wedge surfaces are provided at the face 9 in the insulating disc 6 remote from the emission surface 11. The face 10 of the insulating disc 6 adjacent to the emission surface 11 is plane, at least in the regions where the insulating disc rests on the shoulders or the distance ring 4, and is perpendicular to the longitudinal axis of the cathode sleeve 2.
The wedge surfaces according to the invention on the insulating disc may also be regarded as approximately sections of the surface of a screw thread. Associated with each wedge surface is a recess 7 in the insulating disc 6 starting at the circumference. The purpose of these recesses 7 is to enable the insulating disc to be inserted in the control electrode 1 which is effected in such a manner that the projections 3 on the control electrode slide through the recesses 7 during insertion. If, after the insertion of the insulating disc in the control electrode, this rests on a shoulder (not shown) or on the spacing ring 4, the ceramic disc is turned whereupon the wedge surfaces 8 engage below the projections 3 and as the turning continues, the insulating disc is firmly wedged between the spacing ring 4 and the projections 3. Each wedge surface in the insulating disc is associated with a projection on the control electrode. The arrangement of the wedge surfaces and of the projections is preferably effected so that they are distributed symmetrically round the circumference.
If     the  projections 3 extending inwards in the wall of the control     electrode of  the invention are formed in such a manner that the     material tears  partially as illustrated in FIG. 5, sharp edges are     obtained on these  projections 3 and, as a result of increased friction     against the  insulating disc, prevent this from being accidentally     loosened. As a  result of deliberate turning of the insulating disc 6  in    the opposite  direction, the insulating disc together with the   cathode   sleeve 2 can be  loosened again and removed from the control   electrode   1.   PHILIPS 30AX Deflection unit for a color television display tube:
A deflection unit for a color television display tube 1 having a field deflection coil 8 and a line deflection coil 7, in which the line deflection coil is formed by two diametrically oppositely positioned coil portions which, on the side adjacent the tube's screen, have a flared end 17 having a profile with a path length 22 which is longer than the path length 23 of the contour of the outer surface of the tube, so that raster defects are smaller than when the profile of the flared ends conforms to the contour of the tube surface.

1. A deflection unit for a color television display tube having a neck portion a display screen and a partly flared outer surface portion therebetween, said deflection unit comprising a field deflection coil, a line deflection coil, each of said deflection coils being formed by a pair of diametrically oppositely positioned coil portions, and an annular core of a magnetically permeable material surrounding at least the line deflection coil, each line deflection coil portion being in the form of a saddle coil and having conductors wound to produce first and second side members, a front end and a rear end which together define a window, said front end being in the form of a flange, the front ends of the coil portions of said line deflection coil, when said deflection unit is mounted on a display tube, being closer to the display screen than are the rear ends, with said front ends substantially surrounding a part of the flared portion of the display tube and the plane of the flange-like front ends being at an angle to the longitudinal axis of said display tube, and said first and second side members extending mainly parallel to the tube axis characterized in that the front ends of the line deflection coil portions together define a path whose length is greater than the length of a path around the flared portion of the display tube at which said front ends are intended to surround. 2. A deflection unit as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the front ends of the line deflection coil portions together define a polygon. 3. A deflection unit as claimed in claim 2, characterized in that the polygon is a hexagon. 4. The combination of a deflection unit as claimed in claim 1, 2 or 3, and a color television display tube having a neck portion, a display screen and a flared outer surface portion therebetween, said deflection unit being mounted on said display tube such that the front ends of the line deflection coil portions are closer to the display screen than are the rear ends, with the said front ends surrounding a part of the flared portion of the display tube and the flange-like front ends lying substantially at right angles to the longitudinal axis of the display tube, the path length around said flared portion of said display tube being shorter than the path length of the front ends of the line deflection coil portions surrounding said flared portion, so that defects in a raster formed on the display screen are smaller than when the said path lengths are equal.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a deflection unit for a color television display tube having a neck portion, a display screen, and a flared outer surface portion therebetween, said deflection unit comprising a field deflection coil and a line deflection coil each formed by a pair of diametrically oppositely positioned coil portions, and an annular core of a magnetically permeable material surrounding at least the line deflection coil, each line deflection coil portion being in the form of a saddle coil and having conductors wound to produce first and second side members, a front end and a rear end which together define a window, with the front end forming a flange, the front end of the coil portions of said line deflection coil, when said deflection unit is mounted on a display tube, being closer to the display screen than are the rear ends, with said front ends substantially surrounding a part of the flared portion of the display tube and the flanges, lying at an angle to the longitudinal axis of said display tube.
Such a deflection unit is commonly used for deflecting the electron beams in color television display tubes. In this known unit, the two coil portions which form the field deflection coil and the two coil portions which form the line deflection coil are both adapted, as regards their shape, to the flared profile of the display tube for which the deflection unit is destined. This means that the individual conductors of the coils engage the glass of the display tube as closely as possible when the deflection unit is mounted on the display tube for which it is intended. This applies in particular to the line deflection coil, since the sensitivity of the line deflection system is an important parameter with respect to the quality of a deflection device. For that purpose it is usual to make the front ends of the coil portions of the line deflection coil arc-like in shape such that they closely follow the contour of the display tube at its flared portion. This contour is often rotationally symmetrical so that the front ends in that case are of circular shape.
More
                rectangular shapes  of     this contour are also known, 
        involving  a       corresponding shape  for the     front end so
   that  in      that case    also   they   optimally conform  to the   
    contour  of     the  display  tube.
Parameters, known so far which are suitable to spatially shape the magnetic field of a deflection coil of the saddle type and which fully satisfy the requirements with respect to an optimum sensitivity, are provided by the wire distribution of notably the two substantially axially extending parts of each coil portion of which parts the front end forms the connection. Known techniques for this purpose are profiling of the space in the winding mould, profiling of the press die and the insertion of pins in the mould during the winding process. Furthermore it is known that the shape of the soft-magnetic core may also be used as a parameter to some extent.
It is known that in general a color television display system may present errors which may be distinguished as coma, astigmatism, raster defects and linearity defects. For so-called "three in-line guns" display systems it has proved generally possible, by using the above-mentioned design parameters, to make deflection coils by which astigmatism defects are sufficiently minimised.
Coma can also be minimised often in a corresponding manner. The situation is different for the raster defects and the linearity defects. The raster defects are divided into the North-South and the East-West defects. In "in-line" systems the North-South raster defect produces horizontal lines at the lower and upper edges of the picture which show a slight undulating distortion, while the East-West raster defect produces a strong-pin-cushion-like distortion which may be typically between 8 and 14%. Corrections for raster defects and linearity defects are obtained in general by suitable modulations of the line and field deflection currents. In addition, static magnets may alternatively be used for the correction of the undulating distortion.
A known disadvantage of modulating deflection currents, however, is that complicated electronic deflection circuits are required, which moreover consume additional energy and hence provide an expensive solution. In addition to a higher cost-price, the disadvantage of the use of static correction magnets is that, when the correction has to be larger than a few mm, problems arise with regard to the color purity.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It
                     is an object of the invention to provide a  
deflection      unit     and  a        color   display tube/deflection  
unit   combination    which     reduces  at     least    one of   the  
above   distortions.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a deflection unit as described in the opening paragraph of this specification, characterized in that the front ends of the line deflection coil portions together define a path whose length is greater than the length of a path around the flared portion of the display tube at the part thereof which said front ends are intended to surround.
The invention also provides a color display tube in combination with a deflection unit as described above.
The invention is based on the use of a real coil design parameter by means of which the undulating distortion and the pin cushion-like East-West raster defect, respectively, can be favorably influenced, and is achieved by the shape of the front end of the line deflection coil being no longer made as short as possible, as has been usual so far. As a result of this, the resulting sensitivity of the line deflection coil is slightly less than in conventional designs having the shortest possible length of front end, but, since, compared with designs in which the defects are removed by means of modulation of the deflection currents, the modulation becomes less, the electronic deflection circuits may be simpler which results in a lower overall energy consumption than that required with line deflection coils having a minimum front end length. The simplification of the circuits and their lower overall energy consumption both result in a lower cost-price. When, for the correction of any remaining "undulation effect," a static magnet is required, a weaker magnet may be used than would otherwise be necessary. Furthermore the sensitivity loss is at a minimum if the front end is bent towards the screen over such a distance as to engage the flared part of the display tube.
When using the shape of the front end as a design parameter, it has proved particularly efficacious to shape the profile of the front end along a path which encloses a polygon. In particular if this path according to a preferred form of the deflection unit according to the invention encloses a trapeziu
m,
               the frame defects as  mentioned   above  prove to be     
    correctable         effectively. (In this case the  longer   of the 
  two       parallel    sides   of    the  trapezium should be deemed to
  be          nearest  to the   tube    axis).
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The above and other features of the invention will now be described in greater detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic longitudinal sectional view of a display tube having a deflection unit.
FIG. 2 shows part of a line deflection coil of a known type for use in the deflection unit shown in
FIG. 3 shows diagrammatically the location of the front end of the coil shown in FIG. 2 when mounted on a display tube.
FIG. 4 shows a part of a line deflection coil for use in a deflection unit according to the invention.
FIG. 5 shows diagrammatically the location of the front end of the coil shown in FIG. 4 when mounted on a display tube.
FIG. 6 shows in principle the errors to be corrected by the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG.
                     1 is a longitudinal sectional view through a color 
         television         display    tube 1 having a longitudinal tube
   axis  Z,  a      display    screen 2      and  three   electron guns 4
    situated  in   one    plane. An      electromagnetic     deflection 
     unit 5 is  mounted   on   the  tube neck 3.      The deflection  
unit  5       comprises a     pair of    saddle coils 8  which     form 
the coil      portions  of   the   field      deflection coil for  the  
field        deflection, a  pair of    saddle      coils 7 which   form 
the  coil       portions   of the line    deflection     coil for   the 
line        deflection,   and a  magnet  core 6    surrounding    the  
coils in the        form of a   ring.   The  saddle    coils 7 and  8   
 shown are of      the  so-called   sherl type,     which    means  that
 their     end     sections   adjacent the electron   guns    are  not  
   situated  in a       plane   perpendicular  to the tube axis 6,  as  
    are the  end           sections on  the  screen side, but  are  
situated  in a   plane           parallel  to the    tube axis  Z. 
However,  the   invention is   not          restricted  to  the use  of 
  this type   of  saddle coil.
FIG. 2 shows a saddle shaped coil 9 of a conventional type having an arcuate shaped front end section 10, an arcuate shaped rear end section 11 and substantially axially extending intermediate sections 12 and 13 which sections together define a window 14. The profile of the front end section 10 follows a path 15 which is accurately adapted to the contour of the outer surface of the display tube 1 for which the coil 9 is destined. FIG. 3 which is a diagrammatic sectional view of the coil 9 at the area of the front end section 10 illustrates this. Up till now, pairs of such coils 9 have been used as the line deflection coil in conventional deflection units.
FIG.
                     4 shows a saddle shaped coil 16 which is used in a 
   line            deflection      coil  in a deflection unit according 
to    the      invention.       The coil 16      consists  of a front 
end    section  17, a     rear end     section   18 and      
substantially     axially  extending     conductors 19  and    20  which
  sections and          conductors  define  a    window 21. In  this    
case  the  profile   of   the   front    end   section   17  is formed  
along a    path 22      which  is longer than a     path      which is 
adapted   to the       contour of   the  outer surface of   the     
display    tube 1 for     which the      coil 16 is   destined.  All  
this is     illustrated in        FIG. 5 which   is  a     diagrammatic 
  sectional  view  of the      coil 16 at  the     area of   the  front 
   end   section 17  and  in    which the   contour   of the outer      
  surface of    the  display      tube is denoted by 23.     The path 22
 in   this    case        encloses a    trapezium  shaped  space the    
longest   parallel  side    of   which        faces the tube  axis Z,  
but in  general     the  space   to be     enclosed     may be    in the
 form of a  polygon.   In   this    case    the  rear  end  section    
18  is  shown  to be    horizontal,  that  is    to     say it does   
not  lie in a   plane    which  is   at an angle     to the tube   axis 
   as    does the front   end   section    17. This     coil  shape is  
 sometimes      referred   to as   "shell"  coil,  but   the     
invention  is  not    restricted   to   this  shape   of coil.
The favorable effect of the use of this shape of the front end section 17 to correct raster defects may be considered as follows. It is known that raster defects are sensitive to variations of coil parameters on notably the screen side of the deflection unit, while the sensitivity to changes of parameters in the center of the deflection unit and on the gun side is directly reduced. However astigmatism is sensitive in particular to coil parameters in the center and on the screen side of the deflection unit and coma is influenced in particular by coil parameters on the gun side.
In coils of a "conventional" shape of the front end section where the enclosed path length is a minimum, the raster defects are produced
               as follows.  Primarily the   deflection  coil is  
designed    so        that      certain minimum  requirements as   
regards     astigmatism     and     possibly      also coma are 
satisfied  (in as    far   as this     latter      error is not      
corrected for by means    of  provisions   in    the      display  
tube).  This    means  that  the   coil parameters  in    the  center   
   of  the   deflection     coils   are  controlled   optimally  with  
respect      to the      astigmatism.      With respect to    the  
raster  defects no    further     parameter      variations    are   
possible  and   these errors  are    then to be     taken  as they      
   present  themselves  following    the     astigmatism  control.
In coils in which the shape of the front end section may be freely chosen, extra design parameters are available by which the astigmatism and also the raster defects can be influenced.
It has been found that several combinations of the coil parameters in the center of the deflection coils and of the front end section shape are possible which result in an acceptable level of astigmatism while the raster defects are always different. In this manner it is possible to find a front end shape - coil parameter combination with which the ultimate raster defects, for example, the "undulation effect" has fully disappeared or has been greatly reduced or that the pin-cushion distortion in the East-West direction has been reduced by a few percent, while it is even possible to deal with both types of errors simultaneously.
FIG.
                     6 shows diagrammatically, with reference to a  
display        screen     24,     the     raster defects on the upper  
and lower    sides     of the     display     screen to   be   corrected
  by a    deflection  unit    according  to    the     invention having 
   line      deflection  coils of    the type  shown   in  FIG. 4.     
The  raster    lines  25   shown   have  an   undulating    variation  
which  is a        frequently  occurring       shortcoming  of    
in-line  display   systems.   By      using line coils of    the  type  
 shown     in  FIG. 4  it was    found  that  the    raster  lines   
were   influenced so       that they    formed a   straight  line in    
 the    desired manner.  
The invention relates to a deflection unit for a color television display tube having a neck portion, a display screen, and a flared outer surface portion therebetween, said deflection unit comprising a field deflection coil and a line deflection coil each formed by a pair of diametrically oppositely positioned coil portions, and an annular core of a magnetically permeable material surrounding at least the line deflection coil, each line deflection coil portion being in the form of a saddle coil and having conductors wound to produce first and second side members, a front end and a rear end which together define a window, with the front end forming a flange, the front end of the coil portions of said line deflection coil, when said deflection unit is mounted on a display tube, being closer to the display screen than are the rear ends, with said front ends substantially surrounding a part of the flared portion of the display tube and the flanges, lying at an angle to the longitudinal axis of said display tube.
Such a deflection unit is commonly used for deflecting the electron beams in color television display tubes. In this known unit, the two coil portions which form the field deflection coil and the two coil portions which form the line deflection coil are both adapted, as regards their shape, to the flared profile of the display tube for which the deflection unit is destined. This means that the individual conductors of the coils engage the glass of the display tube as closely as possible when the deflection unit is mounted on the display tube for which it is intended. This applies in particular to the line deflection coil, since the sensitivity of the line deflection system is an important parameter with respect to the quality of a deflection device. For that purpose it is usual to make the front ends of the coil portions of the line deflection coil arc-like in shape such that they closely follow the contour of the display tube at its flared portion. This contour is often rotationally symmetrical so that the front ends in that case are of circular shape.
More
                rectangular shapes  of     this contour are also known, 
        involving  a       corresponding shape  for the     front end so
   that  in      that case    also   they   optimally conform  to the   
    contour  of     the  display  tube.Parameters, known so far which are suitable to spatially shape the magnetic field of a deflection coil of the saddle type and which fully satisfy the requirements with respect to an optimum sensitivity, are provided by the wire distribution of notably the two substantially axially extending parts of each coil portion of which parts the front end forms the connection. Known techniques for this purpose are profiling of the space in the winding mould, profiling of the press die and the insertion of pins in the mould during the winding process. Furthermore it is known that the shape of the soft-magnetic core may also be used as a parameter to some extent.
It is known that in general a color television display system may present errors which may be distinguished as coma, astigmatism, raster defects and linearity defects. For so-called "three in-line guns" display systems it has proved generally possible, by using the above-mentioned design parameters, to make deflection coils by which astigmatism defects are sufficiently minimised.
Coma can also be minimised often in a corresponding manner. The situation is different for the raster defects and the linearity defects. The raster defects are divided into the North-South and the East-West defects. In "in-line" systems the North-South raster defect produces horizontal lines at the lower and upper edges of the picture which show a slight undulating distortion, while the East-West raster defect produces a strong-pin-cushion-like distortion which may be typically between 8 and 14%. Corrections for raster defects and linearity defects are obtained in general by suitable modulations of the line and field deflection currents. In addition, static magnets may alternatively be used for the correction of the undulating distortion.
A known disadvantage of modulating deflection currents, however, is that complicated electronic deflection circuits are required, which moreover consume additional energy and hence provide an expensive solution. In addition to a higher cost-price, the disadvantage of the use of static correction magnets is that, when the correction has to be larger than a few mm, problems arise with regard to the color purity.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It
                     is an object of the invention to provide a  
deflection      unit     and  a        color   display tube/deflection  
unit   combination    which     reduces  at     least    one of   the  
above   distortions.According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a deflection unit as described in the opening paragraph of this specification, characterized in that the front ends of the line deflection coil portions together define a path whose length is greater than the length of a path around the flared portion of the display tube at the part thereof which said front ends are intended to surround.
The invention also provides a color display tube in combination with a deflection unit as described above.
The invention is based on the use of a real coil design parameter by means of which the undulating distortion and the pin cushion-like East-West raster defect, respectively, can be favorably influenced, and is achieved by the shape of the front end of the line deflection coil being no longer made as short as possible, as has been usual so far. As a result of this, the resulting sensitivity of the line deflection coil is slightly less than in conventional designs having the shortest possible length of front end, but, since, compared with designs in which the defects are removed by means of modulation of the deflection currents, the modulation becomes less, the electronic deflection circuits may be simpler which results in a lower overall energy consumption than that required with line deflection coils having a minimum front end length. The simplification of the circuits and their lower overall energy consumption both result in a lower cost-price. When, for the correction of any remaining "undulation effect," a static magnet is required, a weaker magnet may be used than would otherwise be necessary. Furthermore the sensitivity loss is at a minimum if the front end is bent towards the screen over such a distance as to engage the flared part of the display tube.
When using the shape of the front end as a design parameter, it has proved particularly efficacious to shape the profile of the front end along a path which encloses a polygon. In particular if this path according to a preferred form of the deflection unit according to the invention encloses a trapeziu
m,
               the frame defects as  mentioned   above  prove to be     
    correctable         effectively. (In this case the  longer   of the 
  two       parallel    sides   of    the  trapezium should be deemed to
  be          nearest  to the   tube    axis).DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The above and other features of the invention will now be described in greater detail, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic longitudinal sectional view of a display tube having a deflection unit.
FIG. 2 shows part of a line deflection coil of a known type for use in the deflection unit shown in
FIG. 3 shows diagrammatically the location of the front end of the coil shown in FIG. 2 when mounted on a display tube.
FIG. 4 shows a part of a line deflection coil for use in a deflection unit according to the invention.
FIG. 5 shows diagrammatically the location of the front end of the coil shown in FIG. 4 when mounted on a display tube.
FIG. 6 shows in principle the errors to be corrected by the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG.
                     1 is a longitudinal sectional view through a color 
         television         display    tube 1 having a longitudinal tube
   axis  Z,  a      display    screen 2      and  three   electron guns 4
    situated  in   one    plane. An      electromagnetic     deflection 
     unit 5 is  mounted   on   the  tube neck 3.      The deflection  
unit  5       comprises a     pair of    saddle coils 8  which     form 
the coil      portions  of   the   field      deflection coil for  the  
field        deflection, a  pair of    saddle      coils 7 which   form 
the  coil       portions   of the line    deflection     coil for   the 
line        deflection,   and a  magnet  core 6    surrounding    the  
coils in the        form of a   ring.   The  saddle    coils 7 and  8   
 shown are of      the  so-called   sherl type,     which    means  that
 their     end     sections   adjacent the electron   guns    are  not  
   situated  in a       plane   perpendicular  to the tube axis 6,  as  
    are the  end           sections on  the  screen side, but  are  
situated  in a   plane           parallel  to the    tube axis  Z. 
However,  the   invention is   not          restricted  to  the use  of 
  this type   of  saddle coil.FIG. 2 shows a saddle shaped coil 9 of a conventional type having an arcuate shaped front end section 10, an arcuate shaped rear end section 11 and substantially axially extending intermediate sections 12 and 13 which sections together define a window 14. The profile of the front end section 10 follows a path 15 which is accurately adapted to the contour of the outer surface of the display tube 1 for which the coil 9 is destined. FIG. 3 which is a diagrammatic sectional view of the coil 9 at the area of the front end section 10 illustrates this. Up till now, pairs of such coils 9 have been used as the line deflection coil in conventional deflection units.
FIG.
                     4 shows a saddle shaped coil 16 which is used in a 
   line            deflection      coil  in a deflection unit according 
to    the      invention.       The coil 16      consists  of a front 
end    section  17, a     rear end     section   18 and      
substantially     axially  extending     conductors 19  and    20  which
  sections and          conductors  define  a    window 21. In  this    
case  the  profile   of   the   front    end   section   17  is formed  
along a    path 22      which  is longer than a     path      which is 
adapted   to the       contour of   the  outer surface of   the     
display    tube 1 for     which the      coil 16 is   destined.  All  
this is     illustrated in        FIG. 5 which   is  a     diagrammatic 
  sectional  view  of the      coil 16 at  the     area of   the  front 
   end   section 17  and  in    which the   contour   of the outer      
  surface of    the  display      tube is denoted by 23.     The path 22
 in   this    case        encloses a    trapezium  shaped  space the    
longest   parallel  side    of   which        faces the tube  axis Z,  
but in  general     the  space   to be     enclosed     may be    in the
 form of a  polygon.   In   this    case    the  rear  end  section    
18  is  shown  to be    horizontal,  that  is    to     say it does   
not  lie in a   plane    which  is   at an angle     to the tube   axis 
   as    does the front   end   section    17. This     coil  shape is  
 sometimes      referred   to as   "shell"  coil,  but   the     
invention  is  not    restricted   to   this  shape   of coil.The favorable effect of the use of this shape of the front end section 17 to correct raster defects may be considered as follows. It is known that raster defects are sensitive to variations of coil parameters on notably the screen side of the deflection unit, while the sensitivity to changes of parameters in the center of the deflection unit and on the gun side is directly reduced. However astigmatism is sensitive in particular to coil parameters in the center and on the screen side of the deflection unit and coma is influenced in particular by coil parameters on the gun side.
In coils of a "conventional" shape of the front end section where the enclosed path length is a minimum, the raster defects are produced
               as follows.  Primarily the   deflection  coil is  
designed    so        that      certain minimum  requirements as   
regards     astigmatism     and     possibly      also coma are 
satisfied  (in as    far   as this     latter      error is not      
corrected for by means    of  provisions   in    the      display  
tube).  This    means  that  the   coil parameters  in    the  center   
   of  the   deflection     coils   are  controlled   optimally  with  
respect      to the      astigmatism.      With respect to    the  
raster  defects no    further     parameter      variations    are   
possible  and   these errors  are    then to be     taken  as they      
   present  themselves  following    the     astigmatism  control.In coils in which the shape of the front end section may be freely chosen, extra design parameters are available by which the astigmatism and also the raster defects can be influenced.
It has been found that several combinations of the coil parameters in the center of the deflection coils and of the front end section shape are possible which result in an acceptable level of astigmatism while the raster defects are always different. In this manner it is possible to find a front end shape - coil parameter combination with which the ultimate raster defects, for example, the "undulation effect" has fully disappeared or has been greatly reduced or that the pin-cushion distortion in the East-West direction has been reduced by a few percent, while it is even possible to deal with both types of errors simultaneously.
FIG.
                     6 shows diagrammatically, with reference to a  
display        screen     24,     the     raster defects on the upper  
and lower    sides     of the     display     screen to   be   corrected
  by a    deflection  unit    according  to    the     invention having 
   line      deflection  coils of    the type  shown   in  FIG. 4.     
The  raster    lines  25   shown   have  an   undulating    variation  
which  is a        frequently  occurring       shortcoming  of    
in-line  display   systems.   By      using line coils of    the  type  
 shown     in  FIG. 4  it was    found  that  the    raster  lines   
were   influenced so       that they    formed a   straight  line in    
 the    desired manner.  PHILIPS 30AX Cathode ray tube deflection unit comprising means for compensating for misalignment of the line and field deflection coil systems:A cathode ray tube deflection unit comprising a field coil system with two diametrically opposite field deflection coils and a line coil system with two diametrically opposite line deflection coils. Each coil has a front end segment (15, 18), a rear-end segment (16, 19) and conductors (17, 20) extending between such segments. In order to prevent rotation of the horizontal lines of the raster on the CRT display screen with respect to the horizontal axis, which rotation is caused by tolerance errors in alignment of the two coil systems, a pair of plate-shaped parts (21, 21') of soft magnetic material are arranged respectively extending across the front end segment (15, 15') of the respective line deflection coils (11, 11') in positions coinciding with diametrically opposite vertices of a rectangle whose diagnonals intersect substantially on the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit, and at which positions a portion of the front end segment of a line deflection coil overlaps a portion of the front end segment of a field deflection coil.
1. An improved deflection unit for a cathode ray tube having a longitudinal axis, a neck portion at one end of such axis and a display
               screen at the other end   thereof, and a flared portion  
               connecting   the neck portion with the   display screen; 
 such       deflection          unit   being adapted to be arranged    
around  said      flared  portion           concentrically with said   
longitudinal  axis       and  comprising a    field  coil       system  
 and a line coil  system   for      deflecting an    electron  beam in  
     said   tube in  mutually      orthogonal   directions;    the field
    coil  system     comprising    a     pair of diametrically       
opposite   saddle-type   field      deflection    coils   located on  
either     side of a     vertical axis    of said       deflection unit 
 and   the  line     deflection coil      system  comprising a       
pair  of  diametrically       opposite   saddle-type  line     
deflection    coils     located on  either side    of   a   horizontal  
axis  of  said       deflection unit;     each of said      coils having
 a   front    end     segment, a rear    end segment    and      
conductors extending   between       such   segments; such   improvement
         being   characterized  in that:    said     deflection unit    
comprises  a pair         of  plate-shaped  parts   of soft   magnetic  
  material     respectively         extending  across the   front end   
 segment of     respective ones     of    said     pair of line   
deflection  coils   in   positions     coinciding  with         
diametrically    opposite  vertices  of a     rectangle whose     
diagonals        intersect     substantially on  the     longitudinal 
axis  of  the     deflection          unit, and at  each  of  which   
positions  a portion  of a   front  end      segment       of  a line  
deflection    coil overlaps a   portion   of  a   front end      segment
     of  a field    deflection  coil. 2.  A      deflection unit  as  
claimed  in     claim    1,     characterized in  that      the   
plate-shaped parts have a    width of          approximately 3   mm, a  
     length which is   substantially  equal  to the  width        of  
the      front   end  segment  of the  line deflection  coil, and a     
 thickness        of      less than   0.5 mm.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The
                     invention relates to a deflection unit for a 
cathode     ray      tube        having  a    neck portion and a display
 screen,   the        deflection  unit       being  arranged    between 
the neck    portion  and      the display  screen   and     around  the 
flared       portion of  the   tube    connecting  the neck   portion   
  and the     display   screen,     the    deflection unit  comprising a
   field   coil      system   and a line    coil      system for  
deflecting an      electron  beam     produced in    the neck     
portion in    mutually      orthogonal   directions; the      field coil
     system  having a   pair   of      diametrically  opposite   saddle 
   type    field   deflection     coils  located   on   either  side   
of a vertical        axis and the    line   coil  system   having a pair
 of       diametrically        opposite  saddle  type   line    
deflection coils    located  on   either     side  of    a  horizontal  
axis    extending   at   right angles to   the       vertical  axis;    
each coil  having a      front  end   segment, a rear    end    segment 
  and    conductors    extending      between the front   and  the     
rear end segments.
2. Description of the Related Art
A deflection unit of the above described type is known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,720, issued Oct. 21, 1980, which corresponds to Netherlands patent specification No. 170,573 corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,720, issued Oct. 21, 1988 and from the magazine "Funkschau" No. 23, 1980, pages 88-92 published in West Germany by Fanzis-Verlag GmbH published in West Germany.
In a deflection unit of this type the line deflection coils which generate a vertical magnetic field for the horizontal deflection must be arranged at right angles to the field deflection coils which generate a horizontal magnetic field for the vertical deflection. In the case of mutually orthogonal positions the magnetic coupling between the coil pairs is equal to zero so that no voltage is induced in the field deflection coils as a result of the magnetic field generated by the line deflection coils.
However, in practice it may occur that due to mechanical inaccuracies and/or manufacturing tolerances of the components during assembly the line deflection coils are not arranged exactly at right angles to the field deflection coils. In such a case a voltage will be induced in the field deflection coil as a result of the magnetic field of the line deflection coils. Detrimental consequences thereof are:
(a) the induced voltage reaches the field deflection circuit and the high voltage thus generated will disturb the operation of this field deflection circuit,
(b) the induced voltage produces a current through the field deflection coil via the field deflection circuit so that a rotation of the horizontal lines of the raster with respect to the horizontal axis becomes visible on the display screen. The convergence is also affected (twist errors).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It
                     is an object of the invention to provide a means   
which          provides          correction in a simple manner for the  
   possibility    that     in a     deflection      unit the line     
deflection coils and  the    field    deflection     coils may  not   be
       arranged exactly at    right   angles.
According to the invention this is achieved by providing two plate-shaped parts of a soft magnetic material near the front end segments of the two line deflection coils in positions which coincide with two diametrically opposite vertices of a rectangle whose diagonals intersect each other at least substantially on the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and at which positions a portion of the front end segment of a line deflection coil overlaps a portion of the front end segment of a field deflection coil.
By providing the soft-magnetic plate-shaped parts in the above described manner the field lines are locally bundled in such a manner that the flux through the field deflection coils, and hence the coupling between the field deflection coils and the line deflection coils, is influenced so that the drawback mentioned above under (a) is eliminated and the drawback mentioned under (b) is greatly reduced.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying Figures wherein:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic cross-section (taken on the y-z plane) of a cathode ray tube with a deflection unit mounted thereon;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic perspective view of the field deflection coils and line deflection coils, shown at a distance from each other, of the deflection unit of the cathode ray tube-deflection unit combination shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a front elevation on a larger scale of a deflection unit consisting of the field deflection coils and line deflection coils,
FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic cross-sectional view of the conductors taken on the line IV--IV in FIG. 3 showing the arrangement of a plate-shaped part with respect to the conductors and;
FIG. 5 is an elevational view of the display screen of the cathode ray tube of FIG. 1, showing a rotation to be corrected by means of the invention of the horizontal lines of the raster relative to the horizontal axis X.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG.
                     1 is a cross-sectional view of a display device    
   comprising  a          cathode     ray tube 1 having an envelope 6   
    extending from a     narrow   neck     portion  2    in which an    
   electron gun system 3 is     mounted to a   wide     cone-shaped     
      portion 4 which is provided  with    a display   screen. A        
   deflection unit  7    is mounted on  the  tube   at the   transition 
       between    the narrow and  the  wide     portion.   This   
deflection       unit 7  has a    support 8 of  insulating    material  
   with a      front    end 9 and a  rear end    10. Between   these  
ends 9  and    10    there       are provided on  the inside of    the  
support  8  a   system    of        deflection coils  11, 11'  for 
generating   a      line   deflection      magnetic     field for 
deflecting   electron    beams      produced by   the     electron   gun
 system   3 in the     horizontal    direction,     and on   the    
outside of   the support 8 a       system  of  deflection   coils    12,
   12'   for    generating a   field    deflection    magnetic  field  
for      deflecting      electron   beams   procuced  by the   electron 
   gun  system 3  in    the       vertical    direction. The   systems  
of   deflection coils     11, 11'  and      12,    12'  are   surrounded
 by   an   annular core  14 of a     magnetisable         material.  The
   separate     coils 12,  12' of the   system of    field        
deflection coils,  as    well    as  the coils  11,  11' of  the system 
 of         line deflection    coils   are  of   the    saddle-type with
  rear end   segments          positioned flat    against  the    tube  
wall.  Deflection   coils of  the       saddle    type  are     
self-supporting   coils   comprising a   number   of      conductors   
which
                 are  wound to form  longitudinal  first and second  
side          packets,    an     arcuate  front end  segment and an  
arcuate   rear   end       segment     together    defining  a window  
aperture.   In  such        deflection  coils  the    rear end    
segments  may be     flared  with      respect to the    profile of    
the display  tube      (the   original   type     of saddle coil)  or  
they   may   be  arranged    flat   against    the    tube   wall (in 
this  type of    saddle    coil   the  rear  end   segments       
follows, as  it were,   the tube       profile).
As
                     has been shown in greater detail in FIGS. 2 and 3, 
  the            deflection      unit  7  has two line deflection coils 
11   and   11'    which       are      diametrically   opposite to each 
  other and   are    arranged  on      either side      of a horizontal 
    axis H,  and  two    field  deflection      coils 12 and 12'      
which   are  located       diametrically  opposite to   each    other 
and are         arranged on     either side of a    vertical axis  V    
  extending  at  right angles          to the horizontal  axis H.
Each line deflection coil consists of a front end segment 15, a rear end segment 16 and conductors 17 connecting the front end segment 15 and the rear end segment 16. Similarly, a field deflection coil 12 consists of a front end segment 18, a rear end segment 19 and conductors 20 connecting the front end segment 18 and the rear end segment 19.
As explained and shown in the Netherlands patent specification No. 170,573 mentioned in the preamble, the coils constituting the deflection device are arranged in conventional manner around a trumpet-shaped portion of a colour television display tube, which trumpet-shaped portion connects a display screen of the television display tube to a neck portion of the relevant television display tube. The arrangement is such that the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit which is constituted by the coils coincides with the longitudinal axis of the display tube, whilst the front end segments 15 and 18 of the line and field deflection coils are located at the end of the deflection unit facing the display screen.
In the following elaboration the quadrant in FIG. 3 located above the horizontal axis H and to the right of the vertical axis V will be denoted the frist quadrant, the quadrant located below the horizontal axis H and to the right of the vertical axis V will be denoted the second quadrant, the quadrant located below the horizontal axis H and to the left of the vertical axis V will be denoted the third quadrant and the quadrant located above the horizontal axis H and to the left of the vertical axis V will be denoted the fourth quadrant.
Assuming that the current flows through the line deflection coils as is indicated by the arrows I and the line and field deflection coils are arranged exactly at right angles to each other, line deflection flux will enter the first quadrant in the field deflection coil, which flux is equal to the line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil in the second quadrant, so that the net line deflection flux in the field deflection coil is equal to zero in this case. The same applies to the line deflection coil located in the third and fourth quadrants.
If, however the symmetry plane of the two line deflection coils 11, 11' has been slightly rotated clockwise with respect to the horizontal axis H (for example, as a result of manufacturing tolerances or the like) the line flux entering the field deflection coil 12 in the first quadrant will slightly decrease and the flux leaving the second quadrant will slightly increase, so that there is a net line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil 12. Correspondingly, a net line deflection flux is obtained entering the field deflection coil 12' located in the third and fourth quadrants.
The
                     (unwanted) result is that the horizontal lines of  
the        raster         present  a    rotation with respect to the    
horizontal   (x)    axis  on   the      display   screen  5  as shown in
    FIG. 5.
In order to counteract this effect, plate-shaped parts 21, 21' manufactured from a soft magnetic material are provided near the transition of the front end segments 15 into the conductors 17, on diagonal D which extends through the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and across those ends of the front end segments 15 of the line deflection coils 11, 11' which are located furthest away from the horizontal axis H as a result of the rotation in the direction of the arrows C. Such plate-shaped parts, as shown in FIG. 4, may have a L-shaped structure and whose long limbs extend along the a portion of the front end segments 15 of the line deflection coils which overlaps a portion of the front end segments 18 of the field deflection coils. The length of these limbs corresponds with the width of the front end segment 15 at this region. The short limbs of the L-shaped plate-shaped parts extends over the edge of the relevant front end segments of the line deflection coils towards the front end segment 18 of the field deflection coil.
By providing these plate-shaped parts or field conductors manufactured from a soft magnetic material, the line deflection flux entering the field deflection coil is intensified in the first quadrant and the line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil in the third quadrant is intensified, so that the above described effect caused by the rotation of the line deflection coils in the direction of the arrows C is counteracted.
It will be evident from the foregoing that in the case of a rotation of the symmetry plane of the line deflection coils in an anti-clockwise direction relative to the horizontal axis the plate-shaped parts have to be pr
ovided on   the   line  deflection coils  at two diametrically opposite  points   located on   the  diagonal D'.
A rotation of the line deflection coils with respect to their desired position is mentioned above as an example. However, the field deflection coils may deviate from their symmetrical location, or both the line deflection coils and the field deflection coils may have a deviating location. In all these cases the present invention provides a correction by arranging two plate-shaped soft magnetic parts near the front end segments of the two line deflection coils in positions which coincide with two diametrically opposite vertices of a rectangle whose diagonals intersect each other at least substantially on the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and in which positions a portion of a front end segment of a line deflection coil overlaps a portion of the front end segments of a field deflection coil. And in all these cases the explanation given for their operation remains valid.
In one embodiment parts 21, 21' were manufactured from an Si Fe alloy having a thickness of 0.35 mm and a width of 3 mm, which in a deflection unit as described in the article mentioned in the preamble resulted in a coupling influence of 9 mV at a voltage of 1 V across the line deflection coils.
The influence of spreading, if not corrected, is, for example, 6 mV in the case of an incorrect arrangement, which results in a total range of between -18 mV and +18 mV.
In this case this will be reduced to ±9 mV by using the correction means according to the invention.
In practice the position of the correction means (the plates 21, 21'), and hence the choice of the correct diagonal, can be determined by measuring the phase of the voltage produced across the field deflection coil with respect to the voltage applied across the line deflection coil.
1. Field of the Invention
The
                     invention relates to a deflection unit for a 
cathode     ray      tube        having  a    neck portion and a display
 screen,   the        deflection  unit       being  arranged    between 
the neck    portion  and      the display  screen   and     around  the 
flared       portion of  the   tube    connecting  the neck   portion   
  and the     display   screen,     the    deflection unit  comprising a
   field   coil      system   and a line    coil      system for  
deflecting an      electron  beam     produced in    the neck     
portion in    mutually      orthogonal   directions; the      field coil
     system  having a   pair   of      diametrically  opposite   saddle 
   type    field   deflection     coils  located   on   either  side   
of a vertical        axis and the    line   coil  system   having a pair
 of       diametrically        opposite  saddle  type   line    
deflection coils    located  on   either     side  of    a  horizontal  
axis    extending   at   right angles to   the       vertical  axis;    
each coil  having a      front  end   segment, a rear    end    segment 
  and    conductors    extending      between the front   and  the     
rear end segments.2. Description of the Related Art
A deflection unit of the above described type is known from U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,720, issued Oct. 21, 1980, which corresponds to Netherlands patent specification No. 170,573 corresponding to U.S. Pat. No. 4,229,720, issued Oct. 21, 1988 and from the magazine "Funkschau" No. 23, 1980, pages 88-92 published in West Germany by Fanzis-Verlag GmbH published in West Germany.
In a deflection unit of this type the line deflection coils which generate a vertical magnetic field for the horizontal deflection must be arranged at right angles to the field deflection coils which generate a horizontal magnetic field for the vertical deflection. In the case of mutually orthogonal positions the magnetic coupling between the coil pairs is equal to zero so that no voltage is induced in the field deflection coils as a result of the magnetic field generated by the line deflection coils.
However, in practice it may occur that due to mechanical inaccuracies and/or manufacturing tolerances of the components during assembly the line deflection coils are not arranged exactly at right angles to the field deflection coils. In such a case a voltage will be induced in the field deflection coil as a result of the magnetic field of the line deflection coils. Detrimental consequences thereof are:
(a) the induced voltage reaches the field deflection circuit and the high voltage thus generated will disturb the operation of this field deflection circuit,
(b) the induced voltage produces a current through the field deflection coil via the field deflection circuit so that a rotation of the horizontal lines of the raster with respect to the horizontal axis becomes visible on the display screen. The convergence is also affected (twist errors).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It
                     is an object of the invention to provide a means   
which          provides          correction in a simple manner for the  
   possibility    that     in a     deflection      unit the line     
deflection coils and  the    field    deflection     coils may  not   be
       arranged exactly at    right   angles.According to the invention this is achieved by providing two plate-shaped parts of a soft magnetic material near the front end segments of the two line deflection coils in positions which coincide with two diametrically opposite vertices of a rectangle whose diagonals intersect each other at least substantially on the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and at which positions a portion of the front end segment of a line deflection coil overlaps a portion of the front end segment of a field deflection coil.
By providing the soft-magnetic plate-shaped parts in the above described manner the field lines are locally bundled in such a manner that the flux through the field deflection coils, and hence the coupling between the field deflection coils and the line deflection coils, is influenced so that the drawback mentioned above under (a) is eliminated and the drawback mentioned under (b) is greatly reduced.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying Figures wherein:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic cross-section (taken on the y-z plane) of a cathode ray tube with a deflection unit mounted thereon;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic perspective view of the field deflection coils and line deflection coils, shown at a distance from each other, of the deflection unit of the cathode ray tube-deflection unit combination shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a front elevation on a larger scale of a deflection unit consisting of the field deflection coils and line deflection coils,
FIG. 4 is a diagrammatic cross-sectional view of the conductors taken on the line IV--IV in FIG. 3 showing the arrangement of a plate-shaped part with respect to the conductors and;
FIG. 5 is an elevational view of the display screen of the cathode ray tube of FIG. 1, showing a rotation to be corrected by means of the invention of the horizontal lines of the raster relative to the horizontal axis X.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG.
                     1 is a cross-sectional view of a display device    
   comprising  a          cathode     ray tube 1 having an envelope 6   
    extending from a     narrow   neck     portion  2    in which an    
   electron gun system 3 is     mounted to a   wide     cone-shaped     
      portion 4 which is provided  with    a display   screen. A        
   deflection unit  7    is mounted on  the  tube   at the   transition 
       between    the narrow and  the  wide     portion.   This   
deflection       unit 7  has a    support 8 of  insulating    material  
   with a      front    end 9 and a  rear end    10. Between   these  
ends 9  and    10    there       are provided on  the inside of    the  
support  8  a   system    of        deflection coils  11, 11'  for 
generating   a      line   deflection      magnetic     field for 
deflecting   electron    beams      produced by   the     electron   gun
 system   3 in the     horizontal    direction,     and on   the    
outside of   the support 8 a       system  of  deflection   coils    12,
   12'   for    generating a   field    deflection    magnetic  field  
for      deflecting      electron   beams   procuced  by the   electron 
   gun  system 3  in    the       vertical    direction. The   systems  
of   deflection coils     11, 11'  and      12,    12'  are   surrounded
 by   an   annular core  14 of a     magnetisable         material.  The
   separate     coils 12,  12' of the   system of    field        
deflection coils,  as    well    as  the coils  11,  11' of  the system 
 of         line deflection    coils   are  of   the    saddle-type with
  rear end   segments          positioned flat    against  the    tube  
wall.  Deflection   coils of  the       saddle    type  are     
self-supporting   coils   comprising a   number   of      conductors   
which
                 are  wound to form  longitudinal  first and second  
side          packets,    an     arcuate  front end  segment and an  
arcuate   rear   end       segment     together    defining  a window  
aperture.   In  such        deflection  coils  the    rear end    
segments  may be     flared  with      respect to the    profile of    
the display  tube      (the   original   type     of saddle coil)  or  
they   may   be  arranged    flat   against    the    tube   wall (in 
this  type of    saddle    coil   the  rear  end   segments       
follows, as  it were,   the tube       profile).
As
                     has been shown in greater detail in FIGS. 2 and 3, 
  the            deflection      unit  7  has two line deflection coils 
11   and   11'    which       are      diametrically   opposite to each 
  other and   are    arranged  on      either side      of a horizontal 
    axis H,  and  two    field  deflection      coils 12 and 12'      
which   are  located       diametrically  opposite to   each    other 
and are         arranged on     either side of a    vertical axis  V    
  extending  at  right angles          to the horizontal  axis H.Each line deflection coil consists of a front end segment 15, a rear end segment 16 and conductors 17 connecting the front end segment 15 and the rear end segment 16. Similarly, a field deflection coil 12 consists of a front end segment 18, a rear end segment 19 and conductors 20 connecting the front end segment 18 and the rear end segment 19.
As explained and shown in the Netherlands patent specification No. 170,573 mentioned in the preamble, the coils constituting the deflection device are arranged in conventional manner around a trumpet-shaped portion of a colour television display tube, which trumpet-shaped portion connects a display screen of the television display tube to a neck portion of the relevant television display tube. The arrangement is such that the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit which is constituted by the coils coincides with the longitudinal axis of the display tube, whilst the front end segments 15 and 18 of the line and field deflection coils are located at the end of the deflection unit facing the display screen.
In the following elaboration the quadrant in FIG. 3 located above the horizontal axis H and to the right of the vertical axis V will be denoted the frist quadrant, the quadrant located below the horizontal axis H and to the right of the vertical axis V will be denoted the second quadrant, the quadrant located below the horizontal axis H and to the left of the vertical axis V will be denoted the third quadrant and the quadrant located above the horizontal axis H and to the left of the vertical axis V will be denoted the fourth quadrant.
Assuming that the current flows through the line deflection coils as is indicated by the arrows I and the line and field deflection coils are arranged exactly at right angles to each other, line deflection flux will enter the first quadrant in the field deflection coil, which flux is equal to the line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil in the second quadrant, so that the net line deflection flux in the field deflection coil is equal to zero in this case. The same applies to the line deflection coil located in the third and fourth quadrants.
If, however the symmetry plane of the two line deflection coils 11, 11' has been slightly rotated clockwise with respect to the horizontal axis H (for example, as a result of manufacturing tolerances or the like) the line flux entering the field deflection coil 12 in the first quadrant will slightly decrease and the flux leaving the second quadrant will slightly increase, so that there is a net line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil 12. Correspondingly, a net line deflection flux is obtained entering the field deflection coil 12' located in the third and fourth quadrants.
The
                     (unwanted) result is that the horizontal lines of  
the        raster         present  a    rotation with respect to the    
horizontal   (x)    axis  on   the      display   screen  5  as shown in
    FIG. 5.In order to counteract this effect, plate-shaped parts 21, 21' manufactured from a soft magnetic material are provided near the transition of the front end segments 15 into the conductors 17, on diagonal D which extends through the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and across those ends of the front end segments 15 of the line deflection coils 11, 11' which are located furthest away from the horizontal axis H as a result of the rotation in the direction of the arrows C. Such plate-shaped parts, as shown in FIG. 4, may have a L-shaped structure and whose long limbs extend along the a portion of the front end segments 15 of the line deflection coils which overlaps a portion of the front end segments 18 of the field deflection coils. The length of these limbs corresponds with the width of the front end segment 15 at this region. The short limbs of the L-shaped plate-shaped parts extends over the edge of the relevant front end segments of the line deflection coils towards the front end segment 18 of the field deflection coil.
By providing these plate-shaped parts or field conductors manufactured from a soft magnetic material, the line deflection flux entering the field deflection coil is intensified in the first quadrant and the line deflection flux leaving the field deflection coil in the third quadrant is intensified, so that the above described effect caused by the rotation of the line deflection coils in the direction of the arrows C is counteracted.
It will be evident from the foregoing that in the case of a rotation of the symmetry plane of the line deflection coils in an anti-clockwise direction relative to the horizontal axis the plate-shaped parts have to be pr
ovided on   the   line  deflection coils  at two diametrically opposite  points   located on   the  diagonal D'.A rotation of the line deflection coils with respect to their desired position is mentioned above as an example. However, the field deflection coils may deviate from their symmetrical location, or both the line deflection coils and the field deflection coils may have a deviating location. In all these cases the present invention provides a correction by arranging two plate-shaped soft magnetic parts near the front end segments of the two line deflection coils in positions which coincide with two diametrically opposite vertices of a rectangle whose diagonals intersect each other at least substantially on the longitudinal axis of the deflection unit and in which positions a portion of a front end segment of a line deflection coil overlaps a portion of the front end segments of a field deflection coil. And in all these cases the explanation given for their operation remains valid.
In one embodiment parts 21, 21' were manufactured from an Si Fe alloy having a thickness of 0.35 mm and a width of 3 mm, which in a deflection unit as described in the article mentioned in the preamble resulted in a coupling influence of 9 mV at a voltage of 1 V across the line deflection coils.
The influence of spreading, if not corrected, is, for example, 6 mV in the case of an incorrect arrangement, which results in a total range of between -18 mV and +18 mV.
In this case this will be reduced to ±9 mV by using the correction means according to the invention.
In practice the position of the correction means (the plates 21, 21'), and hence the choice of the correct diagonal, can be determined by measuring the phase of the voltage produced across the field deflection coil with respect to the voltage applied across the line deflection coil.
Cathode-ray tube for displaying coloured pictures PHILIPS IN-LINE ELECTRON GUN SYSTEM TECHNOLOGY 30AX SYSTEM :
By deflecting the electron beams before the focusing lenses in an electron gun system for a color display tube towards the tube axis by non-symmetrical lens fields so that they converge on the display screen, it has proved possible to obtain symmetrical focusing lens fields by means of mechanically non-symmetrical electrodes the axes of which are parallel, if the beams enclose a given angle with the gun axes. This enables an easy manufacture of the electrodes and an accurate assembly of the guns. In these guns the focusing of the beams is independent of the convergence.
1. An electric discharge tube comprising an envelope having a main axis, a display screen and an electron gun system for producing a plurality of electron beams and converging the beams on the display screen, the electron gun system comprising first electrode means for generating the electron beams, the first electrode means being situated along axes parallel to the main axis of said tube; second electrode means situated along the path of the electron beams between the first electrode means and the display screen, said second electrode means comprising respective last electrodes situated on the side toward the dislay screen and an associated preceding electrode, with electrodes in use constitute a lens field which focuses the electron beams symmetrically; and third electrode means between the first and the second electrode means for forming an asymmetric lens field to coverge the electron beam
s on the display screen,   characterized in thatthe axes of the electrodes of all electrode means are parallel to said axes of the first electrode means; and
the last electrodes (76, 96, 106), situated on the side toward the display screen, of those second electrode means which are situated eccentrically with respect to the main axis of the tube, have axes (54) which are situated eccentrically with respect to the axes (55) of the associated preceding electrodes (75, 95, 105) and to the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means, the axes (55) of said preceding electrodes (75, 95, 105) having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (54) of the associated last electrodes (76, 96, 106) situated on the side toward the display screen, said axes (54) of said last electrodes in turn having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means (71, 72, 73, 91, 92, 93).
2. An electric discharge tube as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that all said axes are situated in one plane, the axes of one of the first electrode means and the associated second electrode means coincide with the main axis of the tube, and the axes of two other first and second electrode means are situated symmetrically with respect to the main axis of the tube.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a colour display tube comprising first electrode means to generate plurality of electron beams, situated along axes parallel to the main axis of said tube; a display screen on which said electron beams converge; second electrode means situated along the path of the electron beams between the first electrode means and the display screen, which second electrode means form a lens field which focuses the electron beams symmetrically; and third electrode means between the first and the second electrode means with which, if desired in cooperation with the first electrode means, an asymmetric lens field is formed to converge the electron beams on the display screen.
Such a colour display tube is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106. Such display tubes are used inter alia as tubes to display coloured pictures, as oscilloscope tubes, etc. In such tubes it is desired for the electron beams to be converged in one point on the display screen. In U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106 an asymmetric electron lens is provided in the path of the electron beams which do not coincide with the main axis of the tube between the triode part of the electron gun formed by the cathode, the first and second grids, and the focusing lens, so that
the          beams  are deflected towards each other  and converge on   the        display   screen.  The focusing lens is formed by a  lens field          between two   electrodes.  These electrodes consist of curved    electrode        plates having   apertures  therein. The plates are   curved so as    to    be   always   perpendicular to  the electron path.   By applying a       potential   difference   between the  plates an   electron lens is   formed     which is   symmetrical for   the  electron   beams and which   has a    focusing  effect   and focuses each      electron beam on the   display    screen. It is  very   difficult to    manufacture   such very   accurately    curved electrode    plates and   assemble  them with     respect to each    other. Electrodes of    such   electron guns  are   assembled by   means of    assembly pins which  have     to enclose a very    accurate angle  with     respect to each  other.  In   order  to be  able  to  remove the guns from     the   assembly  pins it is   necessary   for  these pins  to be connected      detachably   in a jig as a   result  of   which their  mutual angle    becomes    less accurate  as a result    of   detrition, diurt,  bending  an     breaking of  the pins.
This problem is recognized in U.S. Pat. No. 3,906,279 and a solution to this problem is given. This patent teaches a construction for the convergence of three electron beams from three assembled electron guns whch operate independently of each other and the axes of which are parallel and hence parallel assembly pins can be used. This construction is characterized in that of each electron gun which is situated eccentrically with respect to the main axis of the tube, the last electrode situated on the side of the display screen has an axis which is situated eccentrically with respect to the axis of the relevant electron gun in a plane through the main axis of the tube and the axis of the electron gun and at a larger distance from the main axis of the tube than the axis of the electron gun. This last electrode also has a larger diameter than the other electrodes of the electron gun. As a result of the eccentrically placed last electrodes, convergence of the electron beams is obtained in a simple manner and at the same time the electron beams are each focused separately.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,772,554 discloses an integrated syste
m       of electron guns    operating in  an analogous manner.    A system    of    electron guns operating    in an analogous  manner and in      which   the   focusing lenses of the guns  not   situated on the  tube    axis     are   asymmetrical is known from German   Patent  Application       2,406,443     laid open to public inspection. All these      constructions    are  less     attractive because they exhibit a very     important     disadvantage. A      variation of the strength of the   focusing   lens in    such  guns at the     same  time has a direct   influence on the      convergence of the    electron   beams,  which is   not desired.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore the object of the invention to provide a simple construction for focusing and converging electron beams independently of each other by means of electron guns the axes of which are parallel so that a simple, rapid and accurate manufacture and assembly are possible.
According to the invention, a colour display tube of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the axes of the electrodes of all electrode means are parallel to the axes axes and that of the second electrode means which are eccentric with respect to the main axis of the tube, the last electrodes (76, 96, 106) situated on the side of the display screen have axes (54) which are eccentric with respect to the axes (55) of the associated preceding electrodes (75,95, 105) and to the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means, the axes (55) of those preceding electrodes (75, 95, 105) having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (54) of the associated last electrodes (76, 96, 106) situated on the side of the display screen, the last-electrode axes (54) in turn having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means (71, 72, 73, 91, 92, 93).
The invention is based on the recognition that, when an electron beam is incident in such a mechanically non-symmetric electrode system at a given angle with the gun axis, a symmetric focusing of the electron beam can nevertheless be obtained so that a variation of the strength of the focusing lens has no influence on
       the convergence. This given angle     which depends   on  the gun       dimensions can be determined experimentally    on  an   optical    bench.
A preferred embodiment of such a colour display tube embodying the invention is characterized in that all these axes are situated in one plane and the axes of one of the first electrode means and the associated second electrode means coincide with the main axis of the tube and the axis of two other first and second electrode means are situated symmetrically with respect to the main axis of the tube.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to a drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a colour display tube embodying the invention,
FIGS. 2 and 3 are cross-sectional views of prior-art electron guns, and
FIGS. 4 to 6 are cross-sectional views of a number of embodiments of electron guns used in colour display tubes embodying the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a colour display tube embodying the invention. In a neck 4 of a glass envelope 1 further composed of a display window 2 and a conical part 3, three electron guns 5, 6 a
nd              7 are provided which generate the electron beams 8, 9 and   10.     The      axes   of these electron guns are situated in one   plane,  the    plane  of     the   drawing. The axis of the central   electron gun  6    coincides  with   the   main   axis 11 of the   envelope. The three     electron guns  consist  of  a   number of     cylindrical electrodes     placed along an  axis. As is   known, it   is    possible  to construct     one or more of the  juxtaposed    electrodes  of   the  guns as  one     assembly. A large number  of  triplets   of  phosphor  lines  are      provided  on the inside of the   display  window.   Each triplet       comprises a  line  consisting of a   green  luminescing   phosphor, a line       consisting of a  blue    luminescing  phosphor and a   line   consisting   of a   red luminescing      phosphor. All triplets together     constitute   the display    screen  12.  The   phosphor lines extend      perpendicularly  to the  plane of    the  drawing. A   shadow mask 13    having   a large  number  of  elongate    apertures 14 parallel   to the    phosphor   lines,   through  which apertures    the electron beams 8, 9      and 10 pass,    is   placed before the display    screen. Since the    electron   beams      enclose a small angle with each  other   and    converge on the  display       screen, each beam is incident  only on      phosphor lines  of one  colour  via     the elongate apertures.  As is    known,   it  is  alternatively  possible   to   provide the electron  guns    in a     triangular arrangement  in the   tube, each   gun being     situated at   the   corner of an  equilateral   triangle. In that   case     the   shadow mask has   circular  apertures and   the display screen is         composed of triplets of    phosphor dots.
FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a prior-art electron gun (U.S. Pat. No. 3,957,106). The means to generate the electron beams each consist of a cathode 15, a grid electrode 16 and an accelerating electrode 17. The convex portion 19 of electrode 18 is provided with apertures 20 and 21. As a result of the convex portion 19 of electrode 18 a non-symmetrical electrostatic field is formed between the electrodes 17 and 18 so that the electrode beams 22 and 23 are bent towards the axis 24 in such manner that these beams converge on the display screen 12. The apertures 25 and 26 in electrode 27 and the apertures 28 and 29 in electrode 30 are provided so that they are placed in the path of the electron beams. The curvature of the convex portions of the electrodes 27 and 30 in which said apertures are provided is such that their surfaces always extend perpendicularly to the paths of the electron beams. As a result of this and by applying a sufficiently large potential difference between the electrodes 27 and 30 a symmetrical lens field is obtained between the electrodes which has a symmetric focusing effect on the electron beams. As a rsult of this, variations in strength of the lens field have no influence on the convergence. The manufacture of electrodes having such accurately curved surfaces is very difficult and the assembly is inaccurate because assembly pins have to be used which enclose an angl
e        with each  other. FIG. 3 shows a system  of   electron  guns    (U.S.      Pat. No.  3,906,279) in which all the axes  31, 32   and 33   of  the       electron guns  34, 35 and 36 extend parallel to  each     other and  are       situated in one  plane. The gun 34 has a cathode    37 and a    grid  38   and  an   anode 39 and  grids 40 and 41. The    corresponding     electrodes   of  gun 35  are  referenced  47 to 51.   The  corresponding     electrodes   of  gun 36 are   referenced 57 to    61.
As is shown in this Figure, the grids 41 and 61 have a larger diameter than the associated grids 40 and 60 and the axes 42 and 43 are situated farther away from the axes 32 than the gun axes 31 and 33. The lens fields between the electrodes 40 and 41 and between the electrodes 60 and 61 are hence not symmetrical and deflect the beams 44 and 45 towards the central beam 46. These lens fields and the lens field between the grids 50 and 51 also serve to focus the electron beams. A small variation in the voltage difference between the electrodes 40 and 41 and between the electrodes 60 and 61 hence has an influence on the convergence and also on the focusing of the electron beams. It will be obvious that this is undesired since it should be possible to provide variations in the focusing and convergence preferably independently of each other.
FIG. 4 shows a first embodiment of an electron gun system in which no curved parts are necessary, all the axes of the electrodes extend parallel to each other and nevertheless a convergence is poss
ible              which is independent of the focusing voltage (the voltage          difference     between the last two electrodes in an electron   path).  It       consists of     three guns 70, 80 and 90 having the   cathodes  71,  81    and   91 in grids  72,    82 and 92 and opposite to   the  electrodes  73,    83  and  93. By means  of    these electrode   means,  three  electron  beams   74,  84  and 94 are  generated    which    initially  extend  parallel to   each  other.  By providing  the  grids     75  and 95  with  apertures 52 and   53  which are  situated  so  as  to  be not      symmetrical with respect  to  the  beams 74  and  94, the    electron beams    74   and 94 are  deflected  towards  the   central   electron  beam 84  in  a  manner    analogous to that  of U.S.   Pat.    No. 2,957,106. The    focusing is  done  by   the lens  fields   between   the  electrodes 75 and    76, 85 and 86   and 95 and   96.   In   contrast  with the  construction    disclosed in U.S.   Pat. No.       3,906,279,  any variation of  the   focusing  lens fields  between   the       electrodes 75 and 76 and    between the  electrodes 95  and 96  of  the       outermost electron guns   has  no influence  at all on   the   convergence      because the electron   beams 74  and 94 are   incident    through said lens      fields at a  given  angle with  the  gun axes.   As  a  result of this, a      focusing  lens  acting   symmetrically on  the   beam  is obtained by means  of  a     few   electrodes  which are   situated   non-symmetrically.
An example of the electric voltages (in Volts) applied to the various electrodes is shown in FIG. 4 for gun 70. A number of dimensions of electrodes and their mutual distances are recorded in the table below:
 
The              distance from axis 54 of electrode 76 to the gun axis 62 is     0.3     mm.     The  distance from axis 55 to axis 62 is 0.4 mm and   the     distance    from    axis  56 to axis 62 is 0.2 mm. For other  gun      dimensions,  other   mutual    axial  distances are necessary.   These can     be  determined   experimentally    on an  optical bench  or  can be      calculated. The   thickness of the  material      (Cr-Ni-steel) from  which     the varous   electrodes are  manufactured   is in    this  embodiment    0.13  to 0.2 mm.   The distance  between   two gun axes is   10   mm. FIG.  5   is a    cross-sectional view of a    second embodiment  of an     electron   gun    system according to the    invention.
For clarity, the same reference numerals are used as in FIG. 4. The convergence of the electron beams 74, 84 and 94 is obtained in this embodiment by causing the ends of the electrodes 75 and 95 situated oppositely to the electrodes 73 and 93 to enclose an angle of approximately 87° with the gun axis. This convergence method is also disclosed already in U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106. The various dimensions correspond approximately to the dimensions indicated with reference to FIG. 4. The electron beams 74, 84 and 94 also converge on the display screen 12. The convergence is independent of the strength of the focusing lens. The convergence of the electron beams can alternatively be obtained by shifting and/or tilting the electrodes 73 and 93 as a result of which the non-symmetrical deflecting lenses are obtained in cooperation with the electrodes 75 and 95. This will not be further described.
FIG. 6 is a cr
oss-sectional              view of a third embodiment of an electron gun system    embodying     the       invention. The electron gun system comprises a    number of      electrodes   102,    103, 105 and 106 which are    constructed so as to  be     common for   the   three  electron beams.    The Figure is drawn      approximately to the   same   scale as  FIGS. 4    and 5. For clarity, the      same reference numerals   are   used as    much  as possible as in  FIGS.  4    and 5. It will be  obvious  that      one of the  electrodes  may be    divided  into two  sub-electrodes  or    that an   extra   electrode may be    added  without this   influencing   the  essence of    the  invention. 
The invention relates to a colour display tube comprising first electrode means to generate plurality of electron beams, situated along axes parallel to the main axis of said tube; a display screen on which said electron beams converge; second electrode means situated along the path of the electron beams between the first electrode means and the display screen, which second electrode means form a lens field which focuses the electron beams symmetrically; and third electrode means between the first and the second electrode means with which, if desired in cooperation with the first electrode means, an asymmetric lens field is formed to converge the electron beams on the display screen.
Such a colour display tube is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106. Such display tubes are used inter alia as tubes to display coloured pictures, as oscilloscope tubes, etc. In such tubes it is desired for the electron beams to be converged in one point on the display screen. In U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106 an asymmetric electron lens is provided in the path of the electron beams which do not coincide with the main axis of the tube between the triode part of the electron gun formed by the cathode, the first and second grids, and the focusing lens, so that
the          beams  are deflected towards each other  and converge on   the        display   screen.  The focusing lens is formed by a  lens field          between two   electrodes.  These electrodes consist of curved    electrode        plates having   apertures  therein. The plates are   curved so as    to    be   always   perpendicular to  the electron path.   By applying a       potential   difference   between the  plates an   electron lens is   formed     which is   symmetrical for   the  electron   beams and which   has a    focusing  effect   and focuses each      electron beam on the   display    screen. It is  very   difficult to    manufacture   such very   accurately    curved electrode    plates and   assemble  them with     respect to each    other. Electrodes of    such   electron guns  are   assembled by   means of    assembly pins which  have     to enclose a very    accurate angle  with     respect to each  other.  In   order  to be  able  to  remove the guns from     the   assembly  pins it is   necessary   for  these pins  to be connected      detachably   in a jig as a   result  of   which their  mutual angle    becomes    less accurate  as a result    of   detrition, diurt,  bending  an     breaking of  the pins.This problem is recognized in U.S. Pat. No. 3,906,279 and a solution to this problem is given. This patent teaches a construction for the convergence of three electron beams from three assembled electron guns whch operate independently of each other and the axes of which are parallel and hence parallel assembly pins can be used. This construction is characterized in that of each electron gun which is situated eccentrically with respect to the main axis of the tube, the last electrode situated on the side of the display screen has an axis which is situated eccentrically with respect to the axis of the relevant electron gun in a plane through the main axis of the tube and the axis of the electron gun and at a larger distance from the main axis of the tube than the axis of the electron gun. This last electrode also has a larger diameter than the other electrodes of the electron gun. As a result of the eccentrically placed last electrodes, convergence of the electron beams is obtained in a simple manner and at the same time the electron beams are each focused separately.
U.S. Pat. No. 3,772,554 discloses an integrated syste
m       of electron guns    operating in  an analogous manner.    A system    of    electron guns operating    in an analogous  manner and in      which   the   focusing lenses of the guns  not   situated on the  tube    axis     are   asymmetrical is known from German   Patent  Application       2,406,443     laid open to public inspection. All these      constructions    are  less     attractive because they exhibit a very     important     disadvantage. A      variation of the strength of the   focusing   lens in    such  guns at the     same  time has a direct   influence on the      convergence of the    electron   beams,  which is   not desired.SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is therefore the object of the invention to provide a simple construction for focusing and converging electron beams independently of each other by means of electron guns the axes of which are parallel so that a simple, rapid and accurate manufacture and assembly are possible.
According to the invention, a colour display tube of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the axes of the electrodes of all electrode means are parallel to the axes axes and that of the second electrode means which are eccentric with respect to the main axis of the tube, the last electrodes (76, 96, 106) situated on the side of the display screen have axes (54) which are eccentric with respect to the axes (55) of the associated preceding electrodes (75,95, 105) and to the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means, the axes (55) of those preceding electrodes (75, 95, 105) having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (54) of the associated last electrodes (76, 96, 106) situated on the side of the display screen, the last-electrode axes (54) in turn having a smaller distance to the main axis of the tube than the axes (62) of the associated first electrode means (71, 72, 73, 91, 92, 93).
The invention is based on the recognition that, when an electron beam is incident in such a mechanically non-symmetric electrode system at a given angle with the gun axis, a symmetric focusing of the electron beam can nevertheless be obtained so that a variation of the strength of the focusing lens has no influence on
       the convergence. This given angle     which depends   on  the gun       dimensions can be determined experimentally    on  an   optical    bench.A preferred embodiment of such a colour display tube embodying the invention is characterized in that all these axes are situated in one plane and the axes of one of the first electrode means and the associated second electrode means coincide with the main axis of the tube and the axis of two other first and second electrode means are situated symmetrically with respect to the main axis of the tube.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to a drawing, in which:
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a colour display tube embodying the invention,
FIGS. 2 and 3 are cross-sectional views of prior-art electron guns, and
FIGS. 4 to 6 are cross-sectional views of a number of embodiments of electron guns used in colour display tubes embodying the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG. 1 is a cross-sectional view of a colour display tube embodying the invention. In a neck 4 of a glass envelope 1 further composed of a display window 2 and a conical part 3, three electron guns 5, 6 a
nd              7 are provided which generate the electron beams 8, 9 and   10.     The      axes   of these electron guns are situated in one   plane,  the    plane  of     the   drawing. The axis of the central   electron gun  6    coincides  with   the   main   axis 11 of the   envelope. The three     electron guns  consist  of  a   number of     cylindrical electrodes     placed along an  axis. As is   known, it   is    possible  to construct     one or more of the  juxtaposed    electrodes  of   the  guns as  one     assembly. A large number  of  triplets   of  phosphor  lines  are      provided  on the inside of the   display  window.   Each triplet       comprises a  line  consisting of a   green  luminescing   phosphor, a line       consisting of a  blue    luminescing  phosphor and a   line   consisting   of a   red luminescing      phosphor. All triplets together     constitute   the display    screen  12.  The   phosphor lines extend      perpendicularly  to the  plane of    the  drawing. A   shadow mask 13    having   a large  number  of  elongate    apertures 14 parallel   to the    phosphor   lines,   through  which apertures    the electron beams 8, 9      and 10 pass,    is   placed before the display    screen. Since the    electron   beams      enclose a small angle with each  other   and    converge on the  display       screen, each beam is incident  only on      phosphor lines  of one  colour  via     the elongate apertures.  As is    known,   it  is  alternatively  possible   to   provide the electron  guns    in a     triangular arrangement  in the   tube, each   gun being     situated at   the   corner of an  equilateral   triangle. In that   case     the   shadow mask has   circular  apertures and   the display screen is         composed of triplets of    phosphor dots.FIG. 2 is a cross-sectional view of a prior-art electron gun (U.S. Pat. No. 3,957,106). The means to generate the electron beams each consist of a cathode 15, a grid electrode 16 and an accelerating electrode 17. The convex portion 19 of electrode 18 is provided with apertures 20 and 21. As a result of the convex portion 19 of electrode 18 a non-symmetrical electrostatic field is formed between the electrodes 17 and 18 so that the electrode beams 22 and 23 are bent towards the axis 24 in such manner that these beams converge on the display screen 12. The apertures 25 and 26 in electrode 27 and the apertures 28 and 29 in electrode 30 are provided so that they are placed in the path of the electron beams. The curvature of the convex portions of the electrodes 27 and 30 in which said apertures are provided is such that their surfaces always extend perpendicularly to the paths of the electron beams. As a result of this and by applying a sufficiently large potential difference between the electrodes 27 and 30 a symmetrical lens field is obtained between the electrodes which has a symmetric focusing effect on the electron beams. As a rsult of this, variations in strength of the lens field have no influence on the convergence. The manufacture of electrodes having such accurately curved surfaces is very difficult and the assembly is inaccurate because assembly pins have to be used which enclose an angl
e        with each  other. FIG. 3 shows a system  of   electron  guns    (U.S.      Pat. No.  3,906,279) in which all the axes  31, 32   and 33   of  the       electron guns  34, 35 and 36 extend parallel to  each     other and  are       situated in one  plane. The gun 34 has a cathode    37 and a    grid  38   and  an   anode 39 and  grids 40 and 41. The    corresponding     electrodes   of  gun 35  are  referenced  47 to 51.   The  corresponding     electrodes   of  gun 36 are   referenced 57 to    61.As is shown in this Figure, the grids 41 and 61 have a larger diameter than the associated grids 40 and 60 and the axes 42 and 43 are situated farther away from the axes 32 than the gun axes 31 and 33. The lens fields between the electrodes 40 and 41 and between the electrodes 60 and 61 are hence not symmetrical and deflect the beams 44 and 45 towards the central beam 46. These lens fields and the lens field between the grids 50 and 51 also serve to focus the electron beams. A small variation in the voltage difference between the electrodes 40 and 41 and between the electrodes 60 and 61 hence has an influence on the convergence and also on the focusing of the electron beams. It will be obvious that this is undesired since it should be possible to provide variations in the focusing and convergence preferably independently of each other.
FIG. 4 shows a first embodiment of an electron gun system in which no curved parts are necessary, all the axes of the electrodes extend parallel to each other and nevertheless a convergence is poss
ible              which is independent of the focusing voltage (the voltage          difference     between the last two electrodes in an electron   path).  It       consists of     three guns 70, 80 and 90 having the   cathodes  71,  81    and   91 in grids  72,    82 and 92 and opposite to   the  electrodes  73,    83  and  93. By means  of    these electrode   means,  three  electron  beams   74,  84  and 94 are  generated    which    initially  extend  parallel to   each  other.  By providing  the  grids     75  and 95  with  apertures 52 and   53  which are  situated  so  as  to  be not      symmetrical with respect  to  the  beams 74  and  94, the    electron beams    74   and 94 are  deflected  towards  the   central   electron  beam 84  in  a  manner    analogous to that  of U.S.   Pat.    No. 2,957,106. The    focusing is  done  by   the lens  fields   between   the  electrodes 75 and    76, 85 and 86   and 95 and   96.   In   contrast  with the  construction    disclosed in U.S.   Pat. No.       3,906,279,  any variation of  the   focusing  lens fields  between   the       electrodes 75 and 76 and    between the  electrodes 95  and 96  of  the       outermost electron guns   has  no influence  at all on   the   convergence      because the electron   beams 74  and 94 are   incident    through said lens      fields at a  given  angle with  the  gun axes.   As  a  result of this, a      focusing  lens  acting   symmetrically on  the   beam  is obtained by means  of  a     few   electrodes  which are   situated   non-symmetrically.An example of the electric voltages (in Volts) applied to the various electrodes is shown in FIG. 4 for gun 70. A number of dimensions of electrodes and their mutual distances are recorded in the table below:
| ______________________________________ | 
| electrode length diameter mutual dis- diameter open- no. (mm) (mm) tance (mm) ing (mm) | 
| ______________________________________ | 
76 8 7.6 76-75 1 75 16.2 7.4 1.5 75-73 1.4 73 5.4 0.75 73-72 0.35 72 0.75 72-71 0.12 71  | 
| ______________________________________ | 
For clarity, the same reference numerals are used as in FIG. 4. The convergence of the electron beams 74, 84 and 94 is obtained in this embodiment by causing the ends of the electrodes 75 and 95 situated oppositely to the electrodes 73 and 93 to enclose an angle of approximately 87° with the gun axis. This convergence method is also disclosed already in U.S. Pat. No. 2,957,106. The various dimensions correspond approximately to the dimensions indicated with reference to FIG. 4. The electron beams 74, 84 and 94 also converge on the display screen 12. The convergence is independent of the strength of the focusing lens. The convergence of the electron beams can alternatively be obtained by shifting and/or tilting the electrodes 73 and 93 as a result of which the non-symmetrical deflecting lenses are obtained in cooperation with the electrodes 75 and 95. This will not be further described.
FIG. 6 is a cr
oss-sectional              view of a third embodiment of an electron gun system    embodying     the       invention. The electron gun system comprises a    number of      electrodes   102,    103, 105 and 106 which are    constructed so as to  be     common for   the   three  electron beams.    The Figure is drawn      approximately to the   same   scale as  FIGS. 4    and 5. For clarity, the      same reference numerals   are   used as    much  as possible as in  FIGS.  4    and 5. It will be  obvious  that      one of the  electrodes  may be    divided  into two  sub-electrodes  or    that an   extra   electrode may be    added  without this   influencing   the  essence of    the  invention. CRT TUBE PHILIPS 30AX TECHNOLOGY Method of Production / manufacturing a color display CRT tube and color display tube manufactured according to said method.A ring is provided to correct the convergence, color purity and frame errors of a color display tube which ring is magnetized as a multipole and which is secured in or around the tube neck and around the paths of the electron beams.
The magnetization of such a ring can best be carried out by energizing a magnetization unit with a combination of direct currents thereby generating a multipole magnetic field and then effecting the magnetization by generating a decaying alternating magnetic field which preferably varies its direction continuously.
1.          A method of   manufacturing a color   display tube in which      magnetic   poles   are   provided in or around the   neck of said tube      and around  the  paths  of    the electron beams, which   poles    generate   a  permanent static     multipole  magnetic field for the      correction   of  errors in convergence,     color purity  and frame of    the    display   tube, which magnetic poles   are   formed by the      magnetisation of   a   configuration of magnetisable   material       provided  around the paths     of the electron beams, the   method      comprising  energizing  a     magnetisation device with a   combination     of  direct  currents with   which    a static multipole   magnetic    field  is  generated, and    superimposing a    decaying   alternating     magnetic field  over said   static  multipole   magnetic    field  which    initially drives said    magnetisable  material into      saturation   on   either side of the   hysteresis  curve  thereof, said      decaying     alternating magnetic   field being  generated by a   decaying        alternating  current. 2. The   method as claimed  in  claim 1, 6 or  7,        wherein the  decaying   alternating magnetic  field is  generated by     means     of a separate    system of coils in  the magnetisation    device.  3. The      method as   claimed in  claim  2, wherein the   decaying   alternating      magnetic   field varies  its  direction   continuously. 4.  The  method as      claimed   in  claim 3 wherein the    frequency of the  decaying  alternating         current is approximately   the  standard line  frequency. 5. A  colour         display tube   manufactured by means  of  the method as claimed in     claim     4.  6.   The method as claimed in  claim 1  which further    comprises        erasing  any residual magnetism  in said   configuration,   prior to said         magnetisation, with an   alternating magnetic  field.   7. The   method  as      claimed in claim  6  which further comprises      correcting the  errors in       convergence,  color purity and frame of    the   display  picture with a        combination of direct currents    applied to  said    magnetisation device   and     then reversing said    direct currents   while   increasing the   magnitudes     thereof and    applying these  adjusted  direct  currents to   said     magnetisation    device for the  magnetisation  of said    configuration.
Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to a method of manufacturing a color display tube in which magnetic poles are provided in or around the neck of the envelope and around the paths of the electron beams, which poles generate a permanent multipole magnetic field for the correction of the occurring errors in convergence, color purity and frame of the color display tube, which magnetic poles are formed by the magnetisation of a configura
tion        of magnetisable material   provided  around the paths  of   the       electron  beams, which   configuration is  magnetized by  energising  a        magnetising  device with   a combination of  currents with   which  a     static   multipole  magnetic   field is generated.
The invention also relates to a color display tube manufactured according to said method.
In a color display tube of the "delta" type, three electron guns are accommodated in the neck of the tube in a triangular arrangement. The points of intersection of the axes of the guns with a plane perpendicular to the tube axis constitute the corner points of an equilateral triangle.
In a color display tube of the "in-line" type three electron guns are arranged in the tube neck in such manner that the axes of the three guns are situated mainly in one plane while the axis of the central electron gun coincides substantially with the axis of the display tube. The two outermost electron guns are situated symmetrically with respect to the central gun. As long as the electron beams generated by the electron guns are not deflected, the three electron beams, both in tubes of the "delta" type and of the "in-line" type, must coincide in the center of the display screen (static convergence). Because, however, as a result of defects in the manufacture of the display tube, for example, the electron guns are not sealed quite symmetrically with respect to the tube axis, deviations of the frame shape, the color purity and the static convergence occur. It should be possible to correct said deviations.
Such a color display tube of the "in-line" type in which this correction is possible, is disclosed in Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection. Said application describes a color display tube in which the deviations are corrected by the magnetisation of a ring of magnetisable material, as a result of which a static magnetic multipole is formed around the paths of the electron beams. Said ring is provided in or around the tube neck. In the method described in said patent application, the color display tube is actuated after which data, regarding the value and the direction of the convergence
       errors  of the    electron  guns, are   established, with  reference    to   which the   polarity  and   strength of  the  magnetic  multipole      necessary to correct   the  frame,   color purity  and   convergence      errors are determined. The     magnetisation of  the     configuration,     which may consist of a ring, a     ribbon or a  number  of    rods or     blocks grouped around the electron    paths,   may be  carried out  in   a     number of manners. It is possible,  for      example, first to     magnetise    the configuration to full    saturation,   after  which      demagnetisation to  the  desired value   is  carried out with   an       opposite field. A  disadvantage of  this   method  is that, with a         combination of, for  example, a 2, 4,   and  6-pole  field, the polarity        and  strength of the    demagnetisation vary   greatly and  frequently,       dependent  on the   place on  the ring, and  hence  also  the  polarity   and    strength  of   the full  magnetisation  used in  this   method.   Moreover it      appears that  the  required   demagnetising  field has no    linear      relationship with the    required  correction  field. Due to   this       non-linearity it is not  possible   to  use a  combined 2, 4 and     6-pole    field  for the  demagnetisation. It  is    impossible to     successively carry    out the   2, 4 and 6-pole    magnetisation  since,     for each   magnetisation,   the ring  has to be    magnetised fully,      which results in   the  preceding  magnetisation    being  erased   again.   The  possibility of    successively  magnetising   various     places on the   ring is  very    complicated and is not   readily    possible if   the  ring  is situated  in    the tube neck since  the    stray  field of the   field   necessary  for the    magnetisation  again     demagnetizes, at  least   partly,  the  already    magnetised    places.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It           is    therefore an object of the invention to provide a method      with     which a     combined multipole can be obtained by one  total       magnetisation.
According to the invention, a method, of the kind described in the first paragraph with which this is possible, is characterized in that the magnetisation is effected by means of a decaying alternating magnetic field which initially drives the magnetisable material on either side of the hysteresis curve into saturation. After the decay of the alternating magnetic field, a hard magnetisation remains in the material of the configuration which neutralizes the externally applied magnetic field and is, hence, directed oppositely thereto. After switching off the externally applied magnetic field, a magnetic multipole field remains as a result of the configuration magnetized as a multipole. The desired magnetisation may be determined in a number of manners. By observing and/or measuring the deviations in the frame shape, color purity and convergence, the desired multipole can be determined experimentally and the correction may be carried out by magnetisation of the configuration. If small deviations are then still found, the method is repeated once or several times with corrected currents. In this manner, by repeating the method according to the invention, it is possible to produce a complete correction of the errors in frame, color purity and convergence. Preceding the magnetisation, residual magnetism, if any, in the configuration is preferably erased by means of a magnetic field.
The method is preferably carried out by determining the required correction field prior to the
magnetisation        and, after the erasing  of   the   residual magnetism,  by    correcting the     errors in the  convergence,     the color purity  and    the frame of the     displayed  picture by means  of  a     combination   of currents through the      magnetising device,  after    which   the   magnetisation is produced by      reversing the  direction   of  the     combination of currents, increasing the      current   strength  and      simultaneously producing the said decaying        alternating  magnetic    field.
The correction field, obtained with the magnetizing device and measured along the axis of the electron beams, is generally longer than the multipole correction field generated by the configuration. So the correction of the deviations will have to be carried out over a shorter distance along the axis of the tube, which is possible only with a stronger field. During the magnetisation, a combination of currents, which in strength and direction is in the proportion of m:1 to the combination of currents which is necessary to generate a correction multipole field with the device, where m is, for example, -3, should flow through the magnetisation device. The value of m depends on the ratio between the length of the correction multipole field, generated by the magnetizing device, to the effective field length of the magnetized configuration. This depends upon a number of factors, for example, the diameter of the neck, the kind of material, the shape and the place of the configuration, etc., and can be established experimentally. If it proves, upon checking, that the corrections with the magnetized configuration are too large or too small, the magnetisation process can be repeated with varied magnetisation currents.
The decaying alternating magnetic field can be generated by superimposing a decaying alternating current on the combination of currents through the magnetisation device (for example, a device as disclosed in Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection). The decaying alternating magnetic field is preferably generated in the magnetisation device by means of a separate system of coils. In order to obtain a substantially equal influence of all parts of the configuration by the decaying alternating field, it is recommendable not only to cause the alternating field to decay but also to cause it to vary its direction continuously. The system of coils therefore consists preferably of at least two coils and the decaying alternating currents through the coils are shifted in phase with respect to each other. Standard line frequency (50 or 60 Hz) has proven to give good results. The phase shift, when using coils or coil pairs, the axes of which enclose angles of 120° with each other, can simply be obtained from a three-phase line.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to a drawing, in which
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a known color display tube of the "in-line" type having an external static convergence unit,
FIG. 2 shows the pinion transmission used therein,
FIGS. 3 and 4 are two diagrammatic perpendicular cross-sectional views of the color display tube with a ring, which has not yet been magnetized, and in which the outermost electron beams do not converge satisfactorily,
FIGS. 5 and 6 are two diagrammatic perpendicular sectional views of a color display tube in which convergence by means of the magnetisation device has been obtained,
FIGS. 7 and 8 show the magnetisation of a ring arranged in the system of electron guns,
FIGS. 9 and 10 show two diagrammatic perpendicular sectional views of a color display tube with a magnetized ring with which the convergence error, as shown in FIG. 4, is removed,
FIGS. 11 and 12 show two types of devices suitable for magnetisation according to the invention, and
FIGS. 13 to 18 show parts of another type of magnetisation unit.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG.              1 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a known color display      tube    of     the  "in-line" type. Three electron guns 5, 6 and 7,       generating   the     electron  beams 8, 9 and 10, respectively,  are      accommodated in   the  neck 4    of a  glass envelope 1 which  is      composed of a display   window  2, a     funnel-shaped part 3  and a neck      4. The axes of the   electron  guns 5, 6     and 7 are  situated in    one   plane, the plane of   the drawing.  The axis of      the central     electron  gun 6 coincides   substantially with  the  tube axis     11.     The three  electron guns are   seated in a sleeve  16  which is   situated        coaxially in the neck 4.   The display  window 2 has  on  the   inner     surface   thereof a large   number of  triplets of  phosphor   lines.    Each   triplet   comprises a line   of  a phosphor  luminescing   green, a   line   of a  phosphor    luminescing   blue, and  a line of a   phosphor    luminescing  red.   All of the    triplets   together  constitute a     display screen 12.   The  phosphor lines  are     normal  to the plane of    the  drawing. A  shadow  mask  12, in   which a very     large number of    elongate   apertures 14 are  provided    through which   the   electron    beams 8,  9 and  10 pass, is   arranged in   front of  the  display      screen  12. The  electron beams  8, 9  and 10 are    deflected in  the       horizontal direction  (in  the plane of the    drawing)  and in the      vertical   direction (at   right angles thereto)  by  a  system 15  of      deflection coils.   The  three  electron guns  5, 6 and  7  are  assembled      so that the axes    thereof  enclose a  small angle  with   respect to    each   other. As a  result of    this,  the generated   electron  beams  8, 9   and  10   pass through each of    the  apertures  14  at said   angle, the     so-called  color selection  angle,   and   each  impinge  only  upon     phosphor lines of  one color.
A      display   tube has a  good   static   convergence if the  three    electron  beams,   when  they  are not   being   deflected, intersect     each other   substantially  in  the  center of     the display screen.    It has  been   found, however,  that  the  static     convergence  often   is not good, no    more than the  frame shape  and   the     color   purity, which may be the    result of  an insufficiently     accurate      assembly of the guns, and/or    sealing  of the electron    guns, in   the   tube   neck. In order to produce     the static    convergence, so  far,    externally   adjustable correction    units   have   been added  to the  tube.   They  consist of  a number of   pairs   of    multipoles   consisting of  magnetic   rings, for  example  four      two-poles  (two   horizontal and two  vertical),   two four-poles    and    two   six-poles.   The rings of each pair  are coupled    together  by means      of a   pinion  transmission (see FIG.  2), with  which  the   rings are        rotatable with  respect to each other  to  an equal   extent. By       rotating  the  rings with  respect to each   other and/or   together,  the      strength  and/or  direction  of the  two-,  four- or   six-pole   field  is    adjusted.  It will be  obvious   that the  control  of a    display  tube   with  such a  device is   complicated  and     time-consuming.   Moreover,   such a   correction  unit is       material-consuming since, for  a    combination of    multipoles, at    least    eight rings are necessary  which    have to  be   provided    around the neck  so   as to be rotatable  with     respect to each      other.
In the Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830, laid open to public inspection, the complicated correction unit has, therefore, been replaced by one or more magnetized rings, which rings are situated in or around the tube neck or in or around the electron guns.
However, it has proved difficult with the magnetising methods known so far to provide a combination of multipoles in the ring by magnetisation.
The method according to the invention provides a solution.
For clarity, identical components in the following figures will be referred to by the same reference numerals as in FIG. 1.
FIG.              3 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a display tube in   which     the        electron beams do not converge in the horizontal    direction.    As is     known,    the outermost electron beams can be    deflected  more   or less  in    the    opposite direction by means of a    four-pole,  for   example,   towards   the    central beam or away    therefrom. It is  also   possible to   move the   beams    upwards and    downwards. By  means of a   six-pole the   beams can  be  deflected       more or less in  the same   direction. For   simplicity, the    invention    will   be  described with   reference to a   display tube  which     requires only  a    four-pole   correction. The   convergence  errors in   the   horizontal   direction   of   the electron   beams 8  and 10 are  in  this case    equally  large but     opposite.
FIG. 4 is a sectional view of FIG. 3. On the bottom of sleeve 16, a ring 18 is provided of an alloy of Fe, Co, V and Cr (known as Vicalloy) which can be readily magnetized. It will be obvious that the ring may alternatively be provided in other places around the guns or in or around the tube neck. Instead of a ring it is alternatively possible to use a ribbon or a configuration of rods or blocks of magnetisable material.
In FIG. 5 a device 19 for generating a controllable multipole magnetic field is provided around the neck 4 and the ring 18 according to the method of the invention. 2-, 4- or 6-poles and co
mbinations              thereof can be generated by means of the device 19. For the      tube       shown   in FIG. 3, only a four-pole correction is   necessary.    The   coils     of the   device 19, which device will be   described in    detail       hereinafter, are in   this case energized   as four-poles    until the   point     of intersection S of   the three   electron beams  8,   9 and 10,   which in     FIG. 3 was situated     outside the tube 1,   lies  on the   display screen   12.   The current I   through   the coils   of  the device   originates from a     direct   current source B  which     supplies a current   -mI 1    (m     being an experimentally      determined constant   >1) to the     coils   via a current  divider   and   commutator A.   The current  can  be   adjusted   per coil  so as  to  generate the    desired   multipole.  In this   phase of the    method,  an  alternating  current     source C  does not yet   supply  current    (i=0).
FIG. 6 is a perpendicular sectional view of FIG. 5. The current I 1 is a measure of the strength of the required correction field. The correction field of the multipole of the device 19 extends over a larger length of the electron paths than the magnetic field generated later by the magnetized ring. Therefore the field of the ring is to be m-times stronger.
FIG.              7 shows the step of the method in which the ring 18 is       magnetized    as  a    four-pole. As follows from the above, in this       preferred    embodiment  of    the method, the current through the   coils     of the    device must be  -mI 1     during the       magnetisation, so must    traverse in the  reverse direction   and  be       m-times as large as the    current through the  coils during the          correction. Moreover, the    alternating current source  C  supplies a         decaying alternating current    (i=i 1    >0)  to  the    device    19, with which  current   the decaying   alternating   field  is   generated.    When the  alternating   current  is  switched   on, it  must   be so large that    the  ring 18 is    fully magnetized    on either  side   of the hysteresis curve.     When  the   alternating   field  has  decayed,   the ring 18 is magnetized,   in    this   case as  a  four-pole.   It is,  of  course, alternatively   possible to        magnetise the ring  18 as a    six-pole or as a  two-pole  or to provide        combinations  of said    multipoles in  the ring 18 and  to correct   therewith       other   convergence   errors or color purity and  frame   errors. It is    also      possible  to use  said corrections in color    display tubes of  the     "delta"     type.
FIG.              9 shows the display tube 1 shown in FIG. 3, but in this  case          provided    with a ring 18 magnetized according to the  method  of   the       invention as    shown in FIGS. 5 and 7. The  convergence    correction   takes     place only  by   the magnetized  ring 18 present    in sleeve 16.   The     provision of the    required  multipole takes    place at the   display tube 1     factory and     complicated  adjustments   and adjustable   convergence    units  (FIG.  2) may be     omitted.
FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional view perpendicular to FIG. 9. FIG. 11 shows a magnetisation device 19 comprising eight coils 20 with which the convergence (see FIG. 5) and the magnetisation (see FIG. 7) are carried out. For generating the decaying alternating magnetic field, two pairs of coils 21 and 22, extending in this case at right angles to each other, are incorporated in the device 19. The current i a through the pair of coils 21 is shifted in phase through 90° with respect to the current i b through the other pair of coils 22, so that the decaying alternating magnetic field changes its direction during the decay and is a field circulating through the ring 18. FIG. 12 shows a magnetisation device known from Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection. In t
his              case, the decaying alternating current may be superimposed   on     the        direct current through the coils 23 so that extra   coils  are    not        necessary in the device. The coils 23 are wound   around  a  yoke   24.
The magnetisation device 19 may alternatively be composed of a combination of electrical conductors and coils, as is shown diagrammatically in FIGS. 13 to 18.
FIG. 13 is a sectional view of the neck 4 of a display tube 1 at the area of a ring 18 to be magnetised. A two-pole field for corrections in the horizontal direction is generated in this case by causing currents to flow through the conductors 25, 26, 27 and 28 in the direction as shown in the figure. Said conductors may be single wires or wire bundles forming part of one or more coils or turns, and extending parallel to the tube axis at the area of the ring 18.
FIG. 14 shows how, in an analogous manner, a four-pole field for corrections of the outermost beams 8 and 10 in the horizontal direction can be generated by electrical conductors 29, 30, 31 and 32. A four-pole field for corrections of the outermost beams 8 and 10 in the vertic
al              direction is substantially the same. However, the system of            conductors   29, 30, 31 and 32 is rotated through 45° with    respect  to        the neck 4  and  the axis of the tube 1.
FIG. 15 shows, in an analogous manner, a six-pole for corrections in the horizontal direction with conductors 33 to 38. By means of a combination of conductors (wires or wire bundles) with which 2-, 4- and 6-poles can be generated, all combinations of two-, four- and six-pole fields with the desired strength can be obtained by variations of the currents through said conductors 33 to 38.
The decaying alternating magnetic field in a magnetisation unit with conductors as shown in FIGS. 13, 14 and 15 can be obtained by means of coils positioned symmetrically around the neck 4 and the conductors as shown in FIGS. 16 and 17 or 18. By energizing the coils 3
9              and 40, shown in FIG. 16, with a decaying alternating    current,  a          decaying alternating magnetic field is generated. A    better      influencing      of the ring 18 by the decaying   alternating  field is      obtained when a      system of coils having   coils 41 and  42 in FIG.  17     is provided which  is     rotated 90°   with respect to  the coils  39. In     this case, 40 and  the       decaying alternating  current  through the     coils 41 and 42 should    then     preferably be  shifted  90° in phase  with    respect to the   decaying      alternating  current  through the  coils 39    and 40.
It is alternatively possible to generate the decaying al
ternating              magnetic field with one or more systems of coils as shown  in      FIG.     18.    The coils 43, 44 and 45 are situated  symmetrically      around the     tube  axis   and are energized with  decaying  alternating     currents  which    are  shifted   120° in  phase with  respect to each     other (for  example    from a    three-phase  line). 
The invention relates to a method of manufacturing a color display tube in which magnetic poles are provided in or around the neck of the envelope and around the paths of the electron beams, which poles generate a permanent multipole magnetic field for the correction of the occurring errors in convergence, color purity and frame of the color display tube, which magnetic poles are formed by the magnetisation of a configura
tion        of magnetisable material   provided  around the paths  of   the       electron  beams, which   configuration is  magnetized by  energising  a        magnetising  device with   a combination of  currents with   which  a     static   multipole  magnetic   field is generated.The invention also relates to a color display tube manufactured according to said method.
In a color display tube of the "delta" type, three electron guns are accommodated in the neck of the tube in a triangular arrangement. The points of intersection of the axes of the guns with a plane perpendicular to the tube axis constitute the corner points of an equilateral triangle.
In a color display tube of the "in-line" type three electron guns are arranged in the tube neck in such manner that the axes of the three guns are situated mainly in one plane while the axis of the central electron gun coincides substantially with the axis of the display tube. The two outermost electron guns are situated symmetrically with respect to the central gun. As long as the electron beams generated by the electron guns are not deflected, the three electron beams, both in tubes of the "delta" type and of the "in-line" type, must coincide in the center of the display screen (static convergence). Because, however, as a result of defects in the manufacture of the display tube, for example, the electron guns are not sealed quite symmetrically with respect to the tube axis, deviations of the frame shape, the color purity and the static convergence occur. It should be possible to correct said deviations.
Such a color display tube of the "in-line" type in which this correction is possible, is disclosed in Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection. Said application describes a color display tube in which the deviations are corrected by the magnetisation of a ring of magnetisable material, as a result of which a static magnetic multipole is formed around the paths of the electron beams. Said ring is provided in or around the tube neck. In the method described in said patent application, the color display tube is actuated after which data, regarding the value and the direction of the convergence
       errors  of the    electron  guns, are   established, with  reference    to   which the   polarity  and   strength of  the  magnetic  multipole      necessary to correct   the  frame,   color purity  and   convergence      errors are determined. The     magnetisation of  the     configuration,     which may consist of a ring, a     ribbon or a  number  of    rods or     blocks grouped around the electron    paths,   may be  carried out  in   a     number of manners. It is possible,  for      example, first to     magnetise    the configuration to full    saturation,   after  which      demagnetisation to  the  desired value   is  carried out with   an       opposite field. A  disadvantage of  this   method  is that, with a         combination of, for  example, a 2, 4,   and  6-pole  field, the polarity        and  strength of the    demagnetisation vary   greatly and  frequently,       dependent  on the   place on  the ring, and  hence  also  the  polarity   and    strength  of   the full  magnetisation  used in  this   method.   Moreover it      appears that  the  required   demagnetising  field has no    linear      relationship with the    required  correction  field. Due to   this       non-linearity it is not  possible   to  use a  combined 2, 4 and     6-pole    field  for the  demagnetisation. It  is    impossible to     successively carry    out the   2, 4 and 6-pole    magnetisation  since,     for each   magnetisation,   the ring  has to be    magnetised fully,      which results in   the  preceding  magnetisation    being  erased   again.   The  possibility of    successively  magnetising   various     places on the   ring is  very    complicated and is not   readily    possible if   the  ring  is situated  in    the tube neck since  the    stray  field of the   field   necessary  for the    magnetisation  again     demagnetizes, at  least   partly,  the  already    magnetised    places.SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It           is    therefore an object of the invention to provide a method      with     which a     combined multipole can be obtained by one  total       magnetisation.According to the invention, a method, of the kind described in the first paragraph with which this is possible, is characterized in that the magnetisation is effected by means of a decaying alternating magnetic field which initially drives the magnetisable material on either side of the hysteresis curve into saturation. After the decay of the alternating magnetic field, a hard magnetisation remains in the material of the configuration which neutralizes the externally applied magnetic field and is, hence, directed oppositely thereto. After switching off the externally applied magnetic field, a magnetic multipole field remains as a result of the configuration magnetized as a multipole. The desired magnetisation may be determined in a number of manners. By observing and/or measuring the deviations in the frame shape, color purity and convergence, the desired multipole can be determined experimentally and the correction may be carried out by magnetisation of the configuration. If small deviations are then still found, the method is repeated once or several times with corrected currents. In this manner, by repeating the method according to the invention, it is possible to produce a complete correction of the errors in frame, color purity and convergence. Preceding the magnetisation, residual magnetism, if any, in the configuration is preferably erased by means of a magnetic field.
The method is preferably carried out by determining the required correction field prior to the
magnetisation        and, after the erasing  of   the   residual magnetism,  by    correcting the     errors in the  convergence,     the color purity  and    the frame of the     displayed  picture by means  of  a     combination   of currents through the      magnetising device,  after    which   the   magnetisation is produced by      reversing the  direction   of  the     combination of currents, increasing the      current   strength  and      simultaneously producing the said decaying        alternating  magnetic    field.The correction field, obtained with the magnetizing device and measured along the axis of the electron beams, is generally longer than the multipole correction field generated by the configuration. So the correction of the deviations will have to be carried out over a shorter distance along the axis of the tube, which is possible only with a stronger field. During the magnetisation, a combination of currents, which in strength and direction is in the proportion of m:1 to the combination of currents which is necessary to generate a correction multipole field with the device, where m is, for example, -3, should flow through the magnetisation device. The value of m depends on the ratio between the length of the correction multipole field, generated by the magnetizing device, to the effective field length of the magnetized configuration. This depends upon a number of factors, for example, the diameter of the neck, the kind of material, the shape and the place of the configuration, etc., and can be established experimentally. If it proves, upon checking, that the corrections with the magnetized configuration are too large or too small, the magnetisation process can be repeated with varied magnetisation currents.
The decaying alternating magnetic field can be generated by superimposing a decaying alternating current on the combination of currents through the magnetisation device (for example, a device as disclosed in Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection). The decaying alternating magnetic field is preferably generated in the magnetisation device by means of a separate system of coils. In order to obtain a substantially equal influence of all parts of the configuration by the decaying alternating field, it is recommendable not only to cause the alternating field to decay but also to cause it to vary its direction continuously. The system of coils therefore consists preferably of at least two coils and the decaying alternating currents through the coils are shifted in phase with respect to each other. Standard line frequency (50 or 60 Hz) has proven to give good results. The phase shift, when using coils or coil pairs, the axes of which enclose angles of 120° with each other, can simply be obtained from a three-phase line.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to a drawing, in which
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a known color display tube of the "in-line" type having an external static convergence unit,
FIG. 2 shows the pinion transmission used therein,
FIGS. 3 and 4 are two diagrammatic perpendicular cross-sectional views of the color display tube with a ring, which has not yet been magnetized, and in which the outermost electron beams do not converge satisfactorily,
FIGS. 5 and 6 are two diagrammatic perpendicular sectional views of a color display tube in which convergence by means of the magnetisation device has been obtained,
FIGS. 7 and 8 show the magnetisation of a ring arranged in the system of electron guns,
FIGS. 9 and 10 show two diagrammatic perpendicular sectional views of a color display tube with a magnetized ring with which the convergence error, as shown in FIG. 4, is removed,
FIGS. 11 and 12 show two types of devices suitable for magnetisation according to the invention, and
FIGS. 13 to 18 show parts of another type of magnetisation unit.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG.              1 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a known color display      tube    of     the  "in-line" type. Three electron guns 5, 6 and 7,       generating   the     electron  beams 8, 9 and 10, respectively,  are      accommodated in   the  neck 4    of a  glass envelope 1 which  is      composed of a display   window  2, a     funnel-shaped part 3  and a neck      4. The axes of the   electron  guns 5, 6     and 7 are  situated in    one   plane, the plane of   the drawing.  The axis of      the central     electron  gun 6 coincides   substantially with  the  tube axis     11.     The three  electron guns are   seated in a sleeve  16  which is   situated        coaxially in the neck 4.   The display  window 2 has  on  the   inner     surface   thereof a large   number of  triplets of  phosphor   lines.    Each   triplet   comprises a line   of  a phosphor  luminescing   green, a   line   of a  phosphor    luminescing   blue, and  a line of a   phosphor    luminescing  red.   All of the    triplets   together  constitute a     display screen 12.   The  phosphor lines  are     normal  to the plane of    the  drawing. A  shadow  mask  12, in   which a very     large number of    elongate   apertures 14 are  provided    through which   the   electron    beams 8,  9 and  10 pass, is   arranged in   front of  the  display      screen  12. The  electron beams  8, 9  and 10 are    deflected in  the       horizontal direction  (in  the plane of the    drawing)  and in the      vertical   direction (at   right angles thereto)  by  a  system 15  of      deflection coils.   The  three  electron guns  5, 6 and  7  are  assembled      so that the axes    thereof  enclose a  small angle  with   respect to    each   other. As a  result of    this,  the generated   electron  beams  8, 9   and  10   pass through each of    the  apertures  14  at said   angle, the     so-called  color selection  angle,   and   each  impinge  only  upon     phosphor lines of  one color.
A      display   tube has a  good   static   convergence if the  three    electron  beams,   when  they  are not   being   deflected, intersect     each other   substantially  in  the  center of     the display screen.    It has  been   found, however,  that  the  static     convergence  often   is not good, no    more than the  frame shape  and   the     color   purity, which may be the    result of  an insufficiently     accurate      assembly of the guns, and/or    sealing  of the electron    guns, in   the   tube   neck. In order to produce     the static    convergence, so  far,    externally   adjustable correction    units   have   been added  to the  tube.   They  consist of  a number of   pairs   of    multipoles   consisting of  magnetic   rings, for  example  four      two-poles  (two   horizontal and two  vertical),   two four-poles    and    two   six-poles.   The rings of each pair  are coupled    together  by means      of a   pinion  transmission (see FIG.  2), with  which  the   rings are        rotatable with  respect to each other  to  an equal   extent. By       rotating  the  rings with  respect to each   other and/or   together,  the      strength  and/or  direction  of the  two-,  four- or   six-pole   field  is    adjusted.  It will be  obvious   that the  control  of a    display  tube   with  such a  device is   complicated  and     time-consuming.   Moreover,   such a   correction  unit is       material-consuming since, for  a    combination of    multipoles, at    least    eight rings are necessary  which    have to  be   provided    around the neck  so   as to be rotatable  with     respect to each      other.In the Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830, laid open to public inspection, the complicated correction unit has, therefore, been replaced by one or more magnetized rings, which rings are situated in or around the tube neck or in or around the electron guns.
However, it has proved difficult with the magnetising methods known so far to provide a combination of multipoles in the ring by magnetisation.
The method according to the invention provides a solution.
For clarity, identical components in the following figures will be referred to by the same reference numerals as in FIG. 1.
FIG.              3 is a diagrammatic sectional view of a display tube in   which     the        electron beams do not converge in the horizontal    direction.    As is     known,    the outermost electron beams can be    deflected  more   or less  in    the    opposite direction by means of a    four-pole,  for   example,   towards   the    central beam or away    therefrom. It is  also   possible to   move the   beams    upwards and    downwards. By  means of a   six-pole the   beams can  be  deflected       more or less in  the same   direction. For   simplicity, the    invention    will   be  described with   reference to a   display tube  which     requires only  a    four-pole   correction. The   convergence  errors in   the   horizontal   direction   of   the electron   beams 8  and 10 are  in  this case    equally  large but     opposite.FIG. 4 is a sectional view of FIG. 3. On the bottom of sleeve 16, a ring 18 is provided of an alloy of Fe, Co, V and Cr (known as Vicalloy) which can be readily magnetized. It will be obvious that the ring may alternatively be provided in other places around the guns or in or around the tube neck. Instead of a ring it is alternatively possible to use a ribbon or a configuration of rods or blocks of magnetisable material.
In FIG. 5 a device 19 for generating a controllable multipole magnetic field is provided around the neck 4 and the ring 18 according to the method of the invention. 2-, 4- or 6-poles and co
mbinations              thereof can be generated by means of the device 19. For the      tube       shown   in FIG. 3, only a four-pole correction is   necessary.    The   coils     of the   device 19, which device will be   described in    detail       hereinafter, are in   this case energized   as four-poles    until the   point     of intersection S of   the three   electron beams  8,   9 and 10,   which in     FIG. 3 was situated     outside the tube 1,   lies  on the   display screen   12.   The current I   through   the coils   of  the device   originates from a     direct   current source B  which     supplies a current   -mI 1    (m     being an experimentally      determined constant   >1) to the     coils   via a current  divider   and   commutator A.   The current  can  be   adjusted   per coil  so as  to  generate the    desired   multipole.  In this   phase of the    method,  an  alternating  current     source C  does not yet   supply  current    (i=0).FIG. 6 is a perpendicular sectional view of FIG. 5. The current I 1 is a measure of the strength of the required correction field. The correction field of the multipole of the device 19 extends over a larger length of the electron paths than the magnetic field generated later by the magnetized ring. Therefore the field of the ring is to be m-times stronger.
FIG.              7 shows the step of the method in which the ring 18 is       magnetized    as  a    four-pole. As follows from the above, in this       preferred    embodiment  of    the method, the current through the   coils     of the    device must be  -mI 1     during the       magnetisation, so must    traverse in the  reverse direction   and  be       m-times as large as the    current through the  coils during the          correction. Moreover, the    alternating current source  C  supplies a         decaying alternating current    (i=i 1    >0)  to  the    device    19, with which  current   the decaying   alternating   field  is   generated.    When the  alternating   current  is  switched   on, it  must   be so large that    the  ring 18 is    fully magnetized    on either  side   of the hysteresis curve.     When  the   alternating   field  has  decayed,   the ring 18 is magnetized,   in    this   case as  a  four-pole.   It is,  of  course, alternatively   possible to        magnetise the ring  18 as a    six-pole or as a  two-pole  or to provide        combinations  of said    multipoles in  the ring 18 and  to correct   therewith       other   convergence   errors or color purity and  frame   errors. It is    also      possible  to use  said corrections in color    display tubes of  the     "delta"     type.
FIG.              9 shows the display tube 1 shown in FIG. 3, but in this  case          provided    with a ring 18 magnetized according to the  method  of   the       invention as    shown in FIGS. 5 and 7. The  convergence    correction   takes     place only  by   the magnetized  ring 18 present    in sleeve 16.   The     provision of the    required  multipole takes    place at the   display tube 1     factory and     complicated  adjustments   and adjustable   convergence    units  (FIG.  2) may be     omitted.FIG. 10 is a cross-sectional view perpendicular to FIG. 9. FIG. 11 shows a magnetisation device 19 comprising eight coils 20 with which the convergence (see FIG. 5) and the magnetisation (see FIG. 7) are carried out. For generating the decaying alternating magnetic field, two pairs of coils 21 and 22, extending in this case at right angles to each other, are incorporated in the device 19. The current i a through the pair of coils 21 is shifted in phase through 90° with respect to the current i b through the other pair of coils 22, so that the decaying alternating magnetic field changes its direction during the decay and is a field circulating through the ring 18. FIG. 12 shows a magnetisation device known from Netherlands Pat. application No. 7,503,830 laid open to public inspection. In t
his              case, the decaying alternating current may be superimposed   on     the        direct current through the coils 23 so that extra   coils  are    not        necessary in the device. The coils 23 are wound   around  a  yoke   24.The magnetisation device 19 may alternatively be composed of a combination of electrical conductors and coils, as is shown diagrammatically in FIGS. 13 to 18.
FIG. 13 is a sectional view of the neck 4 of a display tube 1 at the area of a ring 18 to be magnetised. A two-pole field for corrections in the horizontal direction is generated in this case by causing currents to flow through the conductors 25, 26, 27 and 28 in the direction as shown in the figure. Said conductors may be single wires or wire bundles forming part of one or more coils or turns, and extending parallel to the tube axis at the area of the ring 18.
FIG. 14 shows how, in an analogous manner, a four-pole field for corrections of the outermost beams 8 and 10 in the horizontal direction can be generated by electrical conductors 29, 30, 31 and 32. A four-pole field for corrections of the outermost beams 8 and 10 in the vertic
al              direction is substantially the same. However, the system of            conductors   29, 30, 31 and 32 is rotated through 45° with    respect  to        the neck 4  and  the axis of the tube 1.FIG. 15 shows, in an analogous manner, a six-pole for corrections in the horizontal direction with conductors 33 to 38. By means of a combination of conductors (wires or wire bundles) with which 2-, 4- and 6-poles can be generated, all combinations of two-, four- and six-pole fields with the desired strength can be obtained by variations of the currents through said conductors 33 to 38.
The decaying alternating magnetic field in a magnetisation unit with conductors as shown in FIGS. 13, 14 and 15 can be obtained by means of coils positioned symmetrically around the neck 4 and the conductors as shown in FIGS. 16 and 17 or 18. By energizing the coils 3
9              and 40, shown in FIG. 16, with a decaying alternating    current,  a          decaying alternating magnetic field is generated. A    better      influencing      of the ring 18 by the decaying   alternating  field is      obtained when a      system of coils having   coils 41 and  42 in FIG.  17     is provided which  is     rotated 90°   with respect to  the coils  39. In     this case, 40 and  the       decaying alternating  current  through the     coils 41 and 42 should    then     preferably be  shifted  90° in phase  with    respect to the   decaying      alternating  current  through the  coils 39    and 40.It is alternatively possible to generate the decaying al
ternating              magnetic field with one or more systems of coils as shown  in      FIG.     18.    The coils 43, 44 and 45 are situated  symmetrically      around the     tube  axis   and are energized with  decaying  alternating     currents  which    are  shifted   120° in  phase with  respect to each     other (for  example    from a    three-phase  line). 
CRT TUBE PHILIPS 30AX TECHNOLOGY Method of manufacturing a static convergence unit, and a color display tube comprising a convergence unit manufactured according to the method, PHILIPS 30AX INTERNAL STATIC CONVERGENCE SYSTEM Application technology:
IMACO RING (Integrated Magnetic Auto Converging )T
he              method according to the invention consists in the     determination    of      data  of the convergence errors of a color     display tube, data    being      derived  from the said determinations     for determining the    polarity  and     the  intensity of magnetic     poles of a structure. The    structure  thus     obtained  generates a     static, permanent,  multipole   magnetic  field     adapted to the      convergence errors  occurring, so   that the  errors are      connected.
What       is  claimed is: 1. A     method of producing  a magnetic   convergence       structure for the static     convergence of  electron   beams which    extend    approximately in one  plane    in a neck  of a   color display    tube of  the  kind  in which the  neck  merges   into  a   flared  portion   adjoined  by a  display  screen, said   method      comprising  providing   around the  neck of  the color  display  tube    an     auxiliary device   for generating  variable  magnetic fields   in   the   neck  of   the color   display tube,  activating  the color   display    tube,   adjusting   the   auxiliary device  to produce a    magnetic field  for     converging the     electron beams,  determining   from  data  derived from   the    adjustment  of   the  auxiliary  device  the  extent  and the direction    of  the   convergence    error  of  each electron   beam, and using such   data  to    determine the      polarity and the   intensity of magnetic  poles  of  said    magnetic      convergence  structure  for generating a  permanent    multi-pole     static     magnetic field for the  correction  of the    convergence   errors     occuring in   the color display  tube.  2. A method    as   claimed in  claim  1,   wherein  the  auxiliary  device  comprises  an      electromagnet  convergence  unit  which   comprises a   number of     coils,   said  generating step  comprising  passing     electrical     currents through    said coils for  generating a magnetic    field       required for the  static   convergence of  the electron beams,  and       said   determining  step   comprising using the  values of the       electrical  currents   for    determining the permanent  magnetic       structure. 3. A method  as     claimed  in claim 2, further  comprising       storing the data from the      auxiliary  device in a memory. 4.  A      method  as claimed in claim 2,   wherein    said  using step   comprises      controlling a magnetizing unit   for    magnetizing  an   annular      magnetizable convergence structure. 5. A   method    as    claimed in    claim   2, further comprising converting the   data into a       code, and      constructing said annular permanent  magnetic    convergence        structure   having a desired magnetic field  strength    from a set of        previously   magnetized structural parts. 6.  A   method  as claimed in    claim     1,   further comprising forming the    convergence  structure    from a       magnetizable mass which is   annularly  arranged on  at  least   one wall of       the neck of the   color display  tube. 7. A   method as   claimed in claim  1,        further comprising  forming the   convergence   structure from a       magnetizable   ring which  is  arranged  on the  neck  of the color   display     tube. 8. A   method as   claimed in  claim  1,  wherein the   convergence     structure    comprises a    non-magnetizable  support   and a number of     permanent  magnetic      dipoles. 9. A method  as   claimed in claim 4, wherein      said  magnetizing     step cofmprises    polarizing the magnetizable     material   of the   annular     convergence  structure at one location  after    the  other  by   means   of the    magnetizing unit. 10. A method  as claimed     in claim 4,      further  comprising   assemblying the  auxiliary device  and
          the   magnetizing unit in one   construction, and then  enclosing  a         convergence  structure to be   magnetized with said   magnetizing    unit.      11. A method  as claimed in claim   10,   further comprising     displacing     said  construction with respect to    said  tube after  said    determining     step. 
Description:
The              invention relates to a method of manufacturing a magnetic           convergence    device for the static convergence of electron  beams    which       extend    approximately in one plane in a neck of a   colour   display       tube, and to a    colour display tube provided   with a   permanent    magnetic    device for the    static convergence   of   electron beams in    the colour    display tube. A  known    device,    described in U.S. Pat.    No. 3,725,831,    consists of at   least   four    permanent magnetic rings    arranged in  pairs   which  generate a      magnetic  field that can be    adjusted as  regards    position and     intensity.  The  adjustability is    obtained by   turning the   two    rings of a  pair in the  same  direction    with  respect  to the      electron beams and by  turning the  one  ring  in    the opposite     direction   with respct to the  other ring. The       adjustability     necessitates that   the rings be arranged  on a  support    which   is     arranged about the neck   of the colour  display  tube and    which    should    include facilities such   that  the adjustability  of    each    pair of  rings,   independent of the    position of the other rings,        is ensured.  The   invention has for  its   object to provide a   method      whereby a  device for    converging electron   beams can be      manufactured   which need  not  be   mechanically adjustable,   so  that     it can have a  very  simple   construction,   and to provide a    colour     display tube  including   such a  device.
To         this end, the   method according  to the  invention  is      characterized  in   that the   colour display tube  is  activated,       after which data  concerning   the   extent and the  direction of  the       convergence error  of each electron     beam are  determined, on the        basis of which is  determined the polarity     and  intensity of      magnetic   poles of a  structure for generating a      permanent,      multi-pole, static   magnetic  field for the correction of the           convergence errors  occurring  in  the colour display tube, about  the        neck   of the colour  display tube   there being provided an      auxiliary    device for    generating variable   magnetic fields in the      neck of  the   colour display    tube, the  auxiliary  device being      subsequently  adjusted   such that a    magnetic  field with    converges    the electron  beams is   produced, data  being    derived   from the     adjustment of  the auxiliary   device thus  obtained,  the     said data    being a   measure for the   convergence errors  and    being used  for     determining  the  structure   generating the    permanent  static  magnetic     field.Using the described method, a device can be manufactured which generates a magnetic field adapted to the colour display tube and which thus constitutes one unit as if it were with the colour display tube. If desired colour purity errors as well as convergence errors can be eliminated by this method. The convergence errors visible on the screen can be measured and expressed in milimeters of horizontal and vertical errors. The errors thus classified represent data whereby, using magnetic poles of an intensity to be derived from the errors, there can be determined a structure of a magnetic multi-pole which generates a permanent magnetic field adapted to the determined convergence errors.
As a result of the generation of a desired magnetic field by means of an auxiliary device and the derivation of data therefrom, it is possible to determine a device adapted to the relevant colour display tube. Simultaneously, it is ensured that the convergence of the electron beams can be effected.
A preferred version of the method according to the invention is characterized in that for the auxiliary device is used an electromagnetic convergence unit which comprises a number of coils wherethrough electrical currents are conducted in order to generate a magnetic field required for the convergence of the electron beams, the values of the electrical currents producing the data for determining an annular permanent magnetic structure. Because the electrical currents whereby the auxiliary device is actuated are characteristic of the magnetic field generated, the intensity and the position of the poles of the magnetic multi-poles to be used for the colour display tube are determined by the determination of the values of the electrical currents.
The data obtained from the auxiliary device can be used in various manners. The data from the auxiliary device can be store
d    in a    memory,  or the data from the    auxiliary device can  be  used        immediately for  controlling a   magnetizing  unit which     magnetizes an      annular  magnetizable structure.   Alternatively  it     is possible to     convert  the  data into a code; on   the basis    thereof  an  annular     permanent  magnetic  structure having a      desired  magnetic field     strength  can be  taken or  composed from a    set   of  already magnetized     structural  parts.  Obviously,  the    latter two    possibilities can  be    performed  after the data  have     been stored in a    memory.A simplification of the method is achieved when the device is formed from a magnetizable mass which is provided in the form of a ring on at least one wall of the neck of the colour display tube. The device to be magnetized is thus arranged around the electron beams to be generated. Subsequently, a construction which comprises the auxiliary device and the magnetizing unit is arranged around the neck of the colour display tube. The auxiliary device is then adjusted, after which the construction can possibly be displaced, so that the magnetizing unit encloses the device. The magnetizing unit is actuated on the basis of the data received from the auxiliary device, and magnetizes the device.
In order to make the construction of a magnetizing unit as simple and as light as possible, it is advantageous to polarize material of the structure to be magnetized one area after the other by means of the magnetizing unit. A suitable alternative of the method for which use can be made of the described construction of the magnetizing unit is characterized in that the device consists of a non-magnetizable support and a number of permanent magnetic bipoles. It was found that any feasible magnetic field required for the static convergence of electron beams in a neck of a colour display tube can be comparatively simply generated using at least one eight-pole electromagnetic convergence unit. Similarly, any desired magnetic field can be generated using a twelve-pole electromagnetic convergence unit. It is to be noted that electromagnetic convergence units have already been proposed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,027,219.
The invention will be described in detail hereinafter with reference to a drawing.
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of a first version of the method according to the invention.
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of a second version of the method according to the invention.
FIG. 3 shows a preferred embodiment of an auxiliary device.
FIG. 4 is a side elevation of a first embodiment of a device manufactured using the method according to the invention.
FIG. 5 is a cross-sectional view of the embodiment shown in FIG. 4.
FIG. 6 is a side elevation of a further embodiment of a device manufactured using the method according to the invention.
FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view of the device shown in FIG. 6.
FIG. 8 is a diagrammatic perspective view of a magnetizing device and a convergence unit arranged therein.
FIG. 9a is a cross-sectional view of a convergence unit manufactured using a method according to the invention.
FIG. 9b is a partial side elevation of part of a support of the convergence unit shown in FIG. 9a.
FIG. 9c shows a permanent magnetic structural part of the device shown in FIG. 9a.
The method according to the invention will be described with reference of FIG. 1. An elec
tromagnetic              auxiliary device 5 is arranged around the neck 3 of the    colour         display   tube 1. The auxiliary device 5 will be    described in   detail       with   reference to FIG. 3. Electrical    currents which   generate a       magnetic field   are applied to the    auxiliary device 5.   When the       electrical currents  are  adjusted    to the correct  value,  a magnetic       field adapted to the  colour     display tube 1 as   regards position and       intensity is  generated.    The  electrical   currents are measured by  means      of  the  measuring  unit 9.  The    electrical currents represent  data     which     completely describe the     magnetic field generated by  the       auxiliary   device 5. The data are   stored   in a memory 19 (for     example,    a ring core   memory) in an   adapted form   (digitally).    The  data can   be  extracted   from the   memory 19 again for    feeding   a  control unit   11.  The control   unit   11 actuates a  magnetizing     unit  13. A magnetic   field  is impressed     on the  device 15   arranged inside    the  magnetizing  unit  13 (shown   to be    arranged   outside this unit  in FIG.    1), the  said  magnetic    field     equalling the magnetic field  generated  by   the   auxiliary    device 5   at   the area of the electron  beams. The  auxiliary       device  5 is   then removed   from the neck 3 and  replaced by  the  device     15.The method is suitable for the application of an automatic process controller 17. The storage of the data in the memory 19, the retrieval thereof, the determination and the feeding of the data to the control unit 11 are operations which are very well suitable for execution by an automatic controller. Similarly, the process controller 17 can dispatch commands at the correct instants to mechanisms which inter alia arrange the auxiliary device 5 on the display tube 1, arrange the device 15 to be magnetized in the magnetizing unit 13, remove the auxiliary device 5 from the display tube 1, and arrange the device 15 on the neck 3 of the display tube 1. Besides these controlling functions, checking functions can also be performed by the process controller, such as the checking of:
the position of the display tube 1 with respect to the auxiliary device 5.
the determination of the number of data by the measuring unit 9.
the actuation of the magnetizing unit 13.
the position of the device 15 with respect to the display tube 1.
The              method shown in FIG. 2 is an alternative to the method      described      with    reference to FIG. 1. The auxiliary device 5 and      the   magnetizing    unit  13   are accommodated together in one      construction   6. Before  the    auxiliary   device 5 and the      magnetizing unit 13 are   arranged  around  the   neck 3 of   the colour      display tube 1, the as   yet  unmagnetized  device   15 is   arranged      in a desired position. The    auxiliary device 5  is    activated  and     adjuste  so that a magnetic    field converging the   electron    beams  is    produced.  Subsequently, the    measuring unit 9    determines the      necessary  data whereby  the  control   unit 11  is   adjusted. The     auxiliary  device 5  may be shifted   so  that   the   magnetizing unit  13    encloses the  device 15.  After  the    current   to the  auxiliary    device 5  has been  interrupted, the     magnetizng   unit  13 is     activated by the  control unit  11. After      magnetization of the      device  15, the auxiliary  device 5 and   the     magnetizing unit 13 are      removed. A  convergence unit  which  has  been     exactly adjusted as     regards   position and strength  has   then been     arranged on the   neck 3   of the  tube  1.FIG. 3 more or less diagrammatically shows an embodiment of an auxiliary device 5. The auxiliary device 5 comprises an annular ferromagnetic core 21 having formed thereon eight pole shoes a, b, c, d, e, f, g, and h which are
situated              in one plane and radially orientated. Each pole shoe has       provided        thereabout a winding wherethrough a direct current I  to      be  adjusted   is     to be conducted.In the space enclosed by the core 21 an eight-pole static magnetic field is generated whose polarity and intensity can be controlled. The value and the direction of the direct currents Ia, Ib, Ic, Id, Ie, If, Ig and Ih can be adjusted on the basis of the value and the direction of the deviations of the electron beams to be converged. The corrections required for achieving colour purity and convergence can be derived from the value and the direction of the direct currents Ia and Ih which form the data from which the necessary corrections are determined.
A similar embodiment can be used for the magnetizing unit, but because the electrical currents required for converging electron beams are smaller than the currents required for magnetizing the device, the conductors of the coils of the magnetizing unit must be constructed in a different manner which takes account the higher current intensities. If a similar embodiment of the auxiliary device has been made suitable for higher current intensities, it can also operate at lower current intensities. It follows that it is possible also to use the magnetizing unit as the auxiliary device, which is in one case connected to the measuring unit and in the other case to the control unit.
FIG. 4 shows a partly cut-away neck 3 having an envelope 31 of a colour display tube, the flared
portion              and the adjoining display screen not being shown. At the  end    of     the      neck 3 there are provided contact pins 33 to  which    cathodes   and        electrodes of the system of electron guns  35 are    connected.   The   device      15 for the static convergence  of the    electron beams     generated by the      system of guns 35  consists of a    support 15A of     synthetic material  and a      ferrite ring 15B. On    the jacket surface  of    the support 15A is    provided  a   ridge  15c   which extends in the     longitudinal  direction;  the  ferrite    ring    15B is provided with a     slot  which co-operates  therewith   and which     opens  into the edge  of     the ring on only one  side, so  that  the   ring  15B  can be   secured  to    the carrier 15A in only   one way.  FIG.  5  is a     cross-sectional  view    which clearly shows  the  ridge  15C  and the    slot of   the device 15.     The references  used in FIG.   5   correspond  to  those used   in FIG. 4.FIG. 6 shows the same portions of the neck 3 of a colour display tube as FIG. 4. Instead of a support on which a ferrite ring is secured, the device consists only of a layer of ferrite 15 which is secured directly to the inner wall 37 of the neck 3 by means of a binding agent. This offers the advantage that a support which requires space and material can be dispensed with. FIG. 7 is a cross-sectional view and illustrates the simplicity of the device 15. The references used correspond to the references of FIG. 6. The device 15 can also be mounted (not shown in the Figure) on the rear of a deflection unit of the colour display tube. It is alternatively possible to arrange the device on grids or on the cathodes in the neck of the colour display tube.
FIG. 8 diagrammatically shows a magnetizing unit 13 whereby the device 15 arranged thereon is magnetically polarized one location after the other. The extent of the polarization is dependent of the value and direction of the used direct current Im and of the number of ampere-turns of the coil 41 arranged about the core of the magnetizing unit 13. The core consists of two portions 43 and 45 which form a substantially closed magnetic circuit. Between a concave pole shoe 47 and a convex pole shoe 49 of the core portions 43 and 45, respectively, there is a space wherein a portion of the device 15 to be magnetized is arranged. The concave and convex pole shoes 47 and 49 preferably are shaped to follow the curved faces 51 and 53 of the device substantially completely. In order to enable easy arrangement and displacement of the device between the pole shoes 47 and 49, the core portions 43 and 45 are provided with ground contact faces 55 and 57 which are perpendicular to each other. The pole shoes 4
7        and 49 can be moved away from and towards  each other,   the   core         portions 43 and 45 always returning to the same  position        relative  to     each other due to the faces 55 and 57   perpendicularly        extending   to  each  other. At the same time,  the  magnetic   contact      resistance   at the  faces  55 snd 57 is  low and  constant,   so that  the     necessary    unambiguous   relationship between the    current Im  and  the    magnetic    field  generated in  the core is   ensured.FIGS. 9a, b and c show a preferred embodiment and details of a static convergence device 15. The device 1
5              consists of a support 61 of synthetic material, for  example,             polycarbonate, wherein eight ferromagnetic discs  (or   "inserts")  63   are        equidistantly arranged along the    circumference. It will  be    obvious    that    this embodiment is    particularly suitable for  being    actuated in a       magnetizing unit    as shown in FIG. 8. The  holes 65    provided in the       support 61    are slightly elliptical so  as to lock    the capsules 63   firmly        in the holes 65. To this end,  the width b    is chosen to be     slightly      smaller than the height h  which equals    the diameter d   of   the  round  discs    (or "inserts")  63. The narrow    portions 67   of the    support 61  with  clamp   the  disc 63 in the  hole   65 due   to their    elastic action. It  is,  of    course, possible  to     magnetize the disc  63   before they are  arranged   in   the support    61;   the sequence  in which   the disc 63 are   arranged in  the      support 61   should  then be carefully   checked.If a method is used where the most suitable structure is selected from a series of permanent magnetic structures on the basis of the adjusting data, it is advantageous to compose this structure from a number of permanent rin
gs.      This will be  illustrated   on the basis of an  example     involving       superimposition of a  four-pole  field and a  six-pole    field.    Assume  that    the magnetic  fields can  each have M   different      intensities,  and that  the   on field  can occupy N    different    positions   with  respect to the  other   field.  If the    magnetic    structure  consists   of one permanent  magnetic   ring,   the   series    from which  selection  can  be made consists of  M×M×N     rings.  If    the  structure  consists  of two  rings, the series   comprises  M+M      rings,   but it  should  then be possible  for the  one ring  to be     arranged  in  N    different  positions with   respect to the other    ring.   If the static       convergence device  is  composed as shown in   FIG.   9a, b  and c or     similar,   only M  kinds of  structural parts   (discs)   having a     different   magnetical   intensity are  required   for  achieving any      desired   structure.Getter connected to cathode ray tube high voltage contact:Disclosed is a picture display tube comprising an envelope having a display window, a cone and a neck
.              An electrode system to generate at least one electron beam   is         mounted    in the neck and an electrical resistive layer   extends    over  an      internal   wall portion of the envelope to a   point near    the    electrode    system. The   tube comprises a getter   which is    detachably    secured to a    connecting   member  projecting  internally    from the wall    of the tube  at a   location    remote  from the    electrode system by   means  of a  resilient    connection    strip. The    portion of the   connection  member   projecting from   the  tube   wall    has a gradually   widening end   having a  largest    transverse  dimension   D   and a   smallest  transverse  dimension d   and the    connection   strip of the      getter has a first  aperture  whose   dimensions   are   larger than the      dimension D. The  first  aperture   debouches via a     passage of  width b   into a   second   aperture of   dimensions A in a   manner    such that        D>A>b>d, so  that the   gradually   widening  end of      the   connecting member in  cooperation   with  the said  second    aperture    forms a   detachable  coupling.1. A display tube comprising an envelope having a conical portion terminating in a generally cylindrical neck and a window portion secured to the end of said conical portion opposite said neck and having a display screen on the inner surface thereof, an electrode system positioned in said neck for generating at least one electron beam directed onto said display screen, an electrically conductive layer extending between said display screen and said electrode system over the inner surface of said conical portion, at least a portion of said layer near said electrode system being an electrical resistive layer and electrically connected to the conductive layer, a high voltage contact provided in said conical portion between said window portion and said electrode system, a getter and means for detachably mounting, in said envelope, said getter inserted into said conical portion through said neck after said window portion is secured to said conical portion and prior to positioning said electrode system in said neck, said mounting means including a connecting member affixed to a wall of said conical portion and projecting into the interior of said envelope, said connecting member having a gradually widening end with a largest transverse dimension D and a smallest transverse dimension d, and a resilient metal strip affixed to said getter, said strip having a first aperture of a dimension larger than said dimension D, a second aperture of dimension A, and an opening of width b extending between said first and second apertures in a manner such that D>A>b>d, so that said end of said connecting member in cooperation with said second aperture form a coupling for detachably mounting said getter in said envelope. 2. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portion of the connecting member projecting from the tube wall widens conically. 3. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portion of the connecting member projecting from the tube wall widens spherically. 4. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1, wherein the portion of the connecting member projecting from the tube wall widens in the form of a pyramid. 5. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1 wherein said metal strip affixed to the getter has an indentation at the region of the second aperture. 6. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 5 wherein the shape of said indentation corresponds to the shape of the gradually widening end of the connecting member. 7. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1, wherein the connection strip of the getter is locked against rotation with respect to the connecting member. 8. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 1 wherein the connecting member is secured to the high voltage contact. 9. A picture display tube as claimed in claim 8 wherein the connecting member and the high voltage contact are integral and are made from sheet material. 10. A device for connecting a getter in a picture display tube in which the getter is inserted via the tube neck and is secured so as to be detachable to a connection member projecting internally from the tube wall by means of a resilient connection strip, characterized in that the device comprises a strip of resilient material which at one end is secured to a rigid member and at the other end has a holder on which a number of studs are present between which the connection strip of the getter can be clamped temporarily and which holder comprises means to detach the connection strip from the holder, which device has an abutment limiting the depth of insertion of the strip in the tube and furthermore has a cable which is guided along the strip and is secured near the holder to bend the strip and thus to transport the getter which is temporarily secured to the holder towards the connection member projecting internally from the tube wall.
Description:
The              invention relates to a picture display tube comprising an        envelope       including a display screen, an electrode system to        generate at  least   one    electron beam directed onto the display        screen, an  electrically      conductive layer which extends at  least       between the  display screen  and     the electrode system  over the    inner    surface of  the envelope. At   least    the portion  of the    conductive    layer situated  near the  electrode  system     is an    electrical    resistive layer. The  tube further  comprises a   high       voltage contact    which is provided in  the envelope   between the     display    screen  and   the electrode system  and which  is     electrically  connected to     the   conductive layer, and a   getter    which  is secured to a  connection       member projecting   internally    from the  tube wall by means  of a    resilient    metal  strip.
Such a picture display tube is disclosed in British patent specification No. 1,226,728.
As a result of the large voltage differences between certain electrodes of the electrode system, electrical flashovers in the tube may occur which are associated with currents rising rapidly in time and reaching high values. As a result of this, damage may be done, in particular, to semiconductor components in the electronic circuit of the television receiver via inductive or capacitive coupling. A known solution for avoiding such damage is to provide an electrically resistive layer on an internal wall portion of the tube envelope near the electrode system. The result of this solution, however, is that the getter usually connected to the electrode system by means of a metal strip has to be secured elsewhere in the tube to prevent the gettering material released from the getter by heating from depositing on and shortcircuiting the resistive layer or prevent the layer from being shortcircuited by the metal strip. Thus the getter should be mounted in the tube at a location remote from the electrode system.
In FIG. 3 of the above-mentioned British patent specification the getter is secured to the high voltage contact. The getter is connected to the contact prior to securing the glass cone to the glass window of the tube. An advantage of this method is that the getter is mounted in the tube during a phase of the manufacturing process of the tube when the location in the tube at which the getter is to be mounted is still readily accessible. The detrimental effects of gases and vapours on the getter during subsequent phases in the manufacturing process can be avoided by using a protective getter or a chemically resistant getter.
The method disclosed in the British patent specification would be satisfactory if there were no need at all for mounting a getter in the tube after the cone and the window are secured to each other as is the case with black-and-white display tubes. However, during manufacture of colour tubes the envelope is stored for some time after the window is secured to the cone. In that case, therefore, it is undesirable to mount the getter at the time the tube envelope is assembled. Furthermore if the tube has to be repaired it has to be provided with a new getter.
It is the object of the invention to provide a picture display tube in which a getter can be introduced through the neck of the tube and in which, in a location remote from the electrode system, the tube is provided with a connection member to which the getter can be easily secured, as well as easily detached.
According to the invention, a picture display tube of the kind mentioned in the preamble is provided with a connecting member which projects from the tube wall. The connecting member has a gradually widening end having a largest transverse dimension D and a smallest transverse dimension d. The getter has a metal connection strip with a first aperture whose dimensions are larger than the largest transverse dimension D. The first aperture debouches via a passage of width b into a second aperture having dimensions A, in a manner such that D>A>b>d, so that the gradually widening end of the connection member in cooperation with the second aperture forms a detachable coupling.
The getter is secured by inserting the widening end of the connecting member through the first aperture in the connecting strip and then moving the connection strip in its longitudinal direction in a manner such that the second aperture is made to cooperate with the widening end of the connecting member. The coupling thus produced is locked in that the connection strip bears on the tube wall on either side of the second aperture and, as a result of the resilience in the strip, the strip is pressed against the widening end of the connection member at the area of the second aperture. It has been found that a good coupling between the connection member and the connection strip is obtained even with low resilience of the strip. Hence no large resilient forces need be overcome for producing the coupling. As a result of this, the auxiliary tool for mounting the getter can be of an extremely simple construction and minimizing the possibility of damage to the tube during mounting of the getter. The removal of the getter during repair of the tube can also be carried out in an extremely simple manner and without exerting great forces with the coupling mechanism of the invention.
The gradually widening end of the connection member may have several shapes. The end preferably is in the form of a sphere, a cone or a pyramid. In a further embodiment according to the invention the connection strip has a deepened portion or an indentation at the region of the second aperture so that an extra locking of the coupling is obtained. The shape of the indentation may correspond to the shape of the gradually widening end of the connection member.
In the latter arrangement and with a connection member widening in the form of a pyramid, the strip may also be locked against rotation with respect to the connection member. Locking against rotation is alternatively possible by providing the widening end of the connection member with at least one flattened portion which cooperates with a straight edge of the second aperture.
The connection member is preferably secured to the high voltage contact provided in the tube wall so that with the insertion of the high voltage contact the connection member for the getter is also obtained. According to a further embodiment of the invention the connection member with the high voltage contact constitutes one assembly of sheet material.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a sectional view of a colour television display tube with a getter according to the invention,
FIG. 2 shows on an enlarged scale the manner in which the getter is secured in the display tube shown in FIG. 1,
FIGS. 3, 3A and 3B are sectional views of embodiments of a connection member according to the invention secured to the high voltage contact,
FIG. 4 is a plan view of a getter having a connection strip according to the invention,
FIG. 5 is a sectional view of an embodiment of a connection construction according to the invention,
FIG. 6 is a sectional view of a connecting member forming one assembly with the high voltage contact, and
FIGS. 7, 7A and 7B show an auxiliary tool for mounting a getter according to the invention in the tube.
The tube, shown
              in FIG. 1 in a vertical sectional view, comprises a glass        envelope       having a display window 1, a cone 2 and a neck 3. An        electrode   system 4     for generating three electron beams 5, 6   and 7      is mounted   in the  neck   3.  The electron beams 5, 6 and  7  are      generated in one   plane, in  this   case  normal to the  plane  of the      drawing, and are   directed onto a    display  screen  8  provided      internally on the display   window 1 and    consisting  of a   large      number of phosphor strips   luminescing in red,     green  and blue   whose     longitudinal direction is   parallel to the  plane  of    the  drawing.    On   their way to the display   screen 8,  the  electron   beams   5, 6   and  7  are  deflected over the   display   screen 8 by  means of a     number   of  deflection  coils 9 arranged     coaxially  around the tube   axis   and  pass   through a  colour   selection    electrode 10 consisting   of a  metal    plate  having    elongate  apertures   11 whose   longitudinal direction   is   also    parallel to   the plane of  the    drawing. The three electron    beams   5,  6 and  7  pass  through the     apertures 11 at a small angle to      each other   and  consequently  each     impinges only upon phosphor     strips  of one   colour. The  tube      furthermore comprises an inner     screening cone   12  screens which  the      electron beams 5, 6 and  7  from   the  earth's  magnetic  field. The    inner    wall of the  tube  is coated    with an  electrically  conductive   layer  13   with   a  portion 14    extending from the  neck-cone    transition in the     neck  3  consisting    of an electrically  resistive    material which  is     composed of a     mixture of approximately 6   parts  by  weight  of  ferric    oxide and 1    part by  weight of graphite  and   2.5  parts   by weight of     potassium   silicate. The  layer 13,  which   may   alternatively  consist  of   an    electrically resistive   layer,  is    connected to a high   voltage     contact  15 provided in the   tube    wall and  is further  connected,  via     contact  springs 16,  to  the   colour  selection   electrode 10 and the      display screen  8   and,  via  contact springs   17,  to the last electrode     of  the   electrode    system 4.
As is known, after evacuation of the tube a layer of gettering material of, for example, barium, strontium, calcium or magnesium is deposited on the tube wall so as to getter the residual gases remained in the tube. In conventional display tubes, the gettering device from which the gettering material is released by heating, is connected to the electrode system either directly or by means of a metal strip. As already stated, this conventional mounting arrangement cannot be used in a display tube having a resistive layer. As shown in FIG. 1, according to the invention, the getter 18 is mounted in the tube by means of a connection strip 19 at a location remote from the electrode system 4. The getter is detachably secured to a connection member welded to the high voltage contact 15 by using a mounting arrangement described hereinafter with reference to FIG. 2. This figure shows the wall portion of the cone 2 in which the high voltage contact 15 is sealed. The high voltage contact 15 has a connection member which extends into the tube cavity and which is in the form of a pin 20 which at its free end widens in the form of a cone and has a largest transverse dimension D and a smallest transverse dimension d, as shown in FIG. 3. As shown in FIG. 2 the getter 18 comprises a metal holder 21 which is welded to the metal connection strip 19. The strip 19 has a first aperture 22 whose dimensions are larger than the transverse dimension D. The aperture 22 communicates via a passage 23 with a second aperture 24 which is smaller than the transverse dimension D but is larger than the transverse dimension d. The width of the passage 23 is slightly larger than the dimension d but is smaller than the aperture 24. This is illustrated in the plan view in FIG. 4 of a getter 28 and a connection strip 29. The strip has a first aperture 32, a passage 33 and a second aperture 34. Due to the resilience of the connection strip 19, which is pre-bent according to the broken lines 25, (shown in FIG. 2), the strip 19 presses against the conically widening end of the pin 20 at the area of the second aperture 24 with which the coupling of the strip 19 and the pin 20 is produced. Possible rotation of the strip 19 about the pin 20 can be prevented, for example, by providing the widening end of the pin 20 with at least one flattened portion as shown in FIG. 3 by the broken line 26 and providing the second aperture 24 with a straight edge cooperating with the flattened portion.
Instead of a conically widening end, other shapes are also possible, for example, the spherically widening end 27 of the connection member shown in FIG. 3A, or the end 30 widening in the form of a pyramid as shown in FIG. 3B. Furthermore it is not necessary to secure the connection member to the high voltage contact. The connection member may also be inserted independently in the tube wall.
FIG. 5 shows a getter structure in which the connection strip 39 has an indentation 40 at the region of th
e              second aperture 44. As a result of this, the coupling   between     the        connection strip 39 and the connection member 41   is     additionally     locked.    Otherwise, the strip 39 again has a   first     aperture 42  which    debouches    via a passage 43 into the   second     aperture 44,  analogously    to the    construction shown in   FIG. 4.
FIG. 6 shows a high voltage contact 50 having a connection member 51 integral therewith. The assembly is manufactured from sheet material and obtained by deep drawing. This construction which has been manufactured from one piece has the advantage that no welding operation need be carried out which might damage the high voltage contact.
FIG. 7 shows a possible embodiment of a device for inserting the getter through the neck of the tube and mounting it in the tube. The device comprises a resilient metal strip 60 which at one end has a metal holder 61 provided with an elongated aperture 62. The other end of the strip 60 is secured to a rigid tube 63 having a handle 64. A pull cable 65 connected at one end to the holder 61 is guided along the strip 60 by means of cable guides 66 and at the other end is attached to a handle 67 rotatably secured to the tube 63. The resilient strip 60 is bent by tensioning the cable 65 by means of the handle 67. A stud 68 is rotatably arranged about a shaft 69 in the aperture 62 of the holder 61. A second pull cable 70, which is also guided along the strip 60 with a small amount of play is rotatably secured at one end to a second handle 71 connected to the tube 63 and is secured to the stud 68 at its other end. By tensioning the pull cable 70 by means of the handle 71, the stud 68 rotates about the shaft 69 releasing a getter secured to the holder 61.
FIG. 7A shows the getter 28 of FIG. 4 with connection strip 29 in a position in which it is mounted on the holder 61. The connection strip 29 has four abutment edges 35 with which the strip 29 can be tensioned between four studs 72 on the holder 61. In the position shown in FIG. 7A, the getter 28 can be positioned in its place via the still open neck 3 of the tube shown in FIG. 1. This is done as follows. The resilient strip 60 of the getter insertion apparatus shown in FIG. 7 is inserted into the neck 3 of the tube a distance such that the abutment member 73 bears against the open end of the tube neck 3. The pull cable 65 is then tensioned so that the strip 60 bends and the holder 61 is moved towards the high voltage contact 15 with the connection member 20. Access to the high voltage contact is provided via a slot-shaped recess 80 in the magnetic screening cone 12, as shown in FIG. 1. The location of the abutment number 73 on the insertion apparatus is such that in the bent condition of the strip 60, the aperture 32 provided in the connection strip 29 corresponds to the location of the connection member 20 so that, when the strip 60 is bent, the connection strip 29 slides over the widening end of the connection member 20. The strip 29 is then moved in its longitudinal direction until the second aperture 34 coincides with the connection member 20. In this phase of the method, the connection strip 29 is detached from the holder 61 by tensioning the cable 70 so that the stud 68 rotates and the connection strip 29 is pressed between the studs 72. Due to the resilience of the connection strip 29, the strip presses against the gradually widening end of the connection member 20 at the area of the aperture 34. Thus the coupling of the strip 29 and the connection member 20 is produced in the manner as shown in FIG. 2 or FIG. 5.
The principle of inserting and securing a getter in the tube has been explained with reference to a manually operated apparatus. Of course, the operation of the apparatus can be mechanized. Detaching the connection strip of the getter from the holder can furthermore be realised in ways differing from that with the stud 68. For example, as shown in FIG. 7B, the holder 90 may consist of two portions 91 and 92 pivoting about a shaft 83. To detach the connection strip of the getter, the part 92 of the holder 90 is tilted in the direction of the arrow 94. According to another possibility, the holder can be made detachable by a construction in which the parts 91 and 92 are drawn apart in the longitudinal direction of the holder.
Such a picture display tube is disclosed in British patent specification No. 1,226,728.
As a result of the large voltage differences between certain electrodes of the electrode system, electrical flashovers in the tube may occur which are associated with currents rising rapidly in time and reaching high values. As a result of this, damage may be done, in particular, to semiconductor components in the electronic circuit of the television receiver via inductive or capacitive coupling. A known solution for avoiding such damage is to provide an electrically resistive layer on an internal wall portion of the tube envelope near the electrode system. The result of this solution, however, is that the getter usually connected to the electrode system by means of a metal strip has to be secured elsewhere in the tube to prevent the gettering material released from the getter by heating from depositing on and shortcircuiting the resistive layer or prevent the layer from being shortcircuited by the metal strip. Thus the getter should be mounted in the tube at a location remote from the electrode system.
In FIG. 3 of the above-mentioned British patent specification the getter is secured to the high voltage contact. The getter is connected to the contact prior to securing the glass cone to the glass window of the tube. An advantage of this method is that the getter is mounted in the tube during a phase of the manufacturing process of the tube when the location in the tube at which the getter is to be mounted is still readily accessible. The detrimental effects of gases and vapours on the getter during subsequent phases in the manufacturing process can be avoided by using a protective getter or a chemically resistant getter.
The method disclosed in the British patent specification would be satisfactory if there were no need at all for mounting a getter in the tube after the cone and the window are secured to each other as is the case with black-and-white display tubes. However, during manufacture of colour tubes the envelope is stored for some time after the window is secured to the cone. In that case, therefore, it is undesirable to mount the getter at the time the tube envelope is assembled. Furthermore if the tube has to be repaired it has to be provided with a new getter.
It is the object of the invention to provide a picture display tube in which a getter can be introduced through the neck of the tube and in which, in a location remote from the electrode system, the tube is provided with a connection member to which the getter can be easily secured, as well as easily detached.
According to the invention, a picture display tube of the kind mentioned in the preamble is provided with a connecting member which projects from the tube wall. The connecting member has a gradually widening end having a largest transverse dimension D and a smallest transverse dimension d. The getter has a metal connection strip with a first aperture whose dimensions are larger than the largest transverse dimension D. The first aperture debouches via a passage of width b into a second aperture having dimensions A, in a manner such that D>A>b>d, so that the gradually widening end of the connection member in cooperation with the second aperture forms a detachable coupling.
The getter is secured by inserting the widening end of the connecting member through the first aperture in the connecting strip and then moving the connection strip in its longitudinal direction in a manner such that the second aperture is made to cooperate with the widening end of the connecting member. The coupling thus produced is locked in that the connection strip bears on the tube wall on either side of the second aperture and, as a result of the resilience in the strip, the strip is pressed against the widening end of the connection member at the area of the second aperture. It has been found that a good coupling between the connection member and the connection strip is obtained even with low resilience of the strip. Hence no large resilient forces need be overcome for producing the coupling. As a result of this, the auxiliary tool for mounting the getter can be of an extremely simple construction and minimizing the possibility of damage to the tube during mounting of the getter. The removal of the getter during repair of the tube can also be carried out in an extremely simple manner and without exerting great forces with the coupling mechanism of the invention.
The gradually widening end of the connection member may have several shapes. The end preferably is in the form of a sphere, a cone or a pyramid. In a further embodiment according to the invention the connection strip has a deepened portion or an indentation at the region of the second aperture so that an extra locking of the coupling is obtained. The shape of the indentation may correspond to the shape of the gradually widening end of the connection member.
In the latter arrangement and with a connection member widening in the form of a pyramid, the strip may also be locked against rotation with respect to the connection member. Locking against rotation is alternatively possible by providing the widening end of the connection member with at least one flattened portion which cooperates with a straight edge of the second aperture.
The connection member is preferably secured to the high voltage contact provided in the tube wall so that with the insertion of the high voltage contact the connection member for the getter is also obtained. According to a further embodiment of the invention the connection member with the high voltage contact constitutes one assembly of sheet material.
The invention will now be described in greater detail with reference to the drawing in which:
FIG. 1 is a sectional view of a colour television display tube with a getter according to the invention,
FIG. 2 shows on an enlarged scale the manner in which the getter is secured in the display tube shown in FIG. 1,
FIGS. 3, 3A and 3B are sectional views of embodiments of a connection member according to the invention secured to the high voltage contact,
FIG. 4 is a plan view of a getter having a connection strip according to the invention,
FIG. 5 is a sectional view of an embodiment of a connection construction according to the invention,
FIG. 6 is a sectional view of a connecting member forming one assembly with the high voltage contact, and
FIGS. 7, 7A and 7B show an auxiliary tool for mounting a getter according to the invention in the tube.
The tube, shown
              in FIG. 1 in a vertical sectional view, comprises a glass        envelope       having a display window 1, a cone 2 and a neck 3. An        electrode   system 4     for generating three electron beams 5, 6   and 7      is mounted   in the  neck   3.  The electron beams 5, 6 and  7  are      generated in one   plane, in  this   case  normal to the  plane  of the      drawing, and are   directed onto a    display  screen  8  provided      internally on the display   window 1 and    consisting  of a   large      number of phosphor strips   luminescing in red,     green  and blue   whose     longitudinal direction is   parallel to the  plane  of    the  drawing.    On   their way to the display   screen 8,  the  electron   beams   5, 6   and  7  are  deflected over the   display   screen 8 by  means of a     number   of  deflection  coils 9 arranged     coaxially  around the tube   axis   and  pass   through a  colour   selection    electrode 10 consisting   of a  metal    plate  having    elongate  apertures   11 whose   longitudinal direction   is   also    parallel to   the plane of  the    drawing. The three electron    beams   5,  6 and  7  pass  through the     apertures 11 at a small angle to      each other   and  consequently  each     impinges only upon phosphor     strips  of one   colour. The  tube      furthermore comprises an inner     screening cone   12  screens which  the      electron beams 5, 6 and  7  from   the  earth's  magnetic  field. The    inner    wall of the  tube  is coated    with an  electrically  conductive   layer  13   with   a  portion 14    extending from the  neck-cone    transition in the     neck  3  consisting    of an electrically  resistive    material which  is     composed of a     mixture of approximately 6   parts  by  weight  of  ferric    oxide and 1    part by  weight of graphite  and   2.5  parts   by weight of     potassium   silicate. The  layer 13,  which   may   alternatively  consist  of   an    electrically resistive   layer,  is    connected to a high   voltage     contact  15 provided in the   tube    wall and  is further  connected,  via     contact  springs 16,  to  the   colour  selection   electrode 10 and the      display screen  8   and,  via  contact springs   17,  to the last electrode     of  the   electrode    system 4.As is known, after evacuation of the tube a layer of gettering material of, for example, barium, strontium, calcium or magnesium is deposited on the tube wall so as to getter the residual gases remained in the tube. In conventional display tubes, the gettering device from which the gettering material is released by heating, is connected to the electrode system either directly or by means of a metal strip. As already stated, this conventional mounting arrangement cannot be used in a display tube having a resistive layer. As shown in FIG. 1, according to the invention, the getter 18 is mounted in the tube by means of a connection strip 19 at a location remote from the electrode system 4. The getter is detachably secured to a connection member welded to the high voltage contact 15 by using a mounting arrangement described hereinafter with reference to FIG. 2. This figure shows the wall portion of the cone 2 in which the high voltage contact 15 is sealed. The high voltage contact 15 has a connection member which extends into the tube cavity and which is in the form of a pin 20 which at its free end widens in the form of a cone and has a largest transverse dimension D and a smallest transverse dimension d, as shown in FIG. 3. As shown in FIG. 2 the getter 18 comprises a metal holder 21 which is welded to the metal connection strip 19. The strip 19 has a first aperture 22 whose dimensions are larger than the transverse dimension D. The aperture 22 communicates via a passage 23 with a second aperture 24 which is smaller than the transverse dimension D but is larger than the transverse dimension d. The width of the passage 23 is slightly larger than the dimension d but is smaller than the aperture 24. This is illustrated in the plan view in FIG. 4 of a getter 28 and a connection strip 29. The strip has a first aperture 32, a passage 33 and a second aperture 34. Due to the resilience of the connection strip 19, which is pre-bent according to the broken lines 25, (shown in FIG. 2), the strip 19 presses against the conically widening end of the pin 20 at the area of the second aperture 24 with which the coupling of the strip 19 and the pin 20 is produced. Possible rotation of the strip 19 about the pin 20 can be prevented, for example, by providing the widening end of the pin 20 with at least one flattened portion as shown in FIG. 3 by the broken line 26 and providing the second aperture 24 with a straight edge cooperating with the flattened portion.
Instead of a conically widening end, other shapes are also possible, for example, the spherically widening end 27 of the connection member shown in FIG. 3A, or the end 30 widening in the form of a pyramid as shown in FIG. 3B. Furthermore it is not necessary to secure the connection member to the high voltage contact. The connection member may also be inserted independently in the tube wall.
FIG. 5 shows a getter structure in which the connection strip 39 has an indentation 40 at the region of th
e              second aperture 44. As a result of this, the coupling   between     the        connection strip 39 and the connection member 41   is     additionally     locked.    Otherwise, the strip 39 again has a   first     aperture 42  which    debouches    via a passage 43 into the   second     aperture 44,  analogously    to the    construction shown in   FIG. 4.FIG. 6 shows a high voltage contact 50 having a connection member 51 integral therewith. The assembly is manufactured from sheet material and obtained by deep drawing. This construction which has been manufactured from one piece has the advantage that no welding operation need be carried out which might damage the high voltage contact.
FIG. 7 shows a possible embodiment of a device for inserting the getter through the neck of the tube and mounting it in the tube. The device comprises a resilient metal strip 60 which at one end has a metal holder 61 provided with an elongated aperture 62. The other end of the strip 60 is secured to a rigid tube 63 having a handle 64. A pull cable 65 connected at one end to the holder 61 is guided along the strip 60 by means of cable guides 66 and at the other end is attached to a handle 67 rotatably secured to the tube 63. The resilient strip 60 is bent by tensioning the cable 65 by means of the handle 67. A stud 68 is rotatably arranged about a shaft 69 in the aperture 62 of the holder 61. A second pull cable 70, which is also guided along the strip 60 with a small amount of play is rotatably secured at one end to a second handle 71 connected to the tube 63 and is secured to the stud 68 at its other end. By tensioning the pull cable 70 by means of the handle 71, the stud 68 rotates about the shaft 69 releasing a getter secured to the holder 61.
FIG. 7A shows the getter 28 of FIG. 4 with connection strip 29 in a position in which it is mounted on the holder 61. The connection strip 29 has four abutment edges 35 with which the strip 29 can be tensioned between four studs 72 on the holder 61. In the position shown in FIG. 7A, the getter 28 can be positioned in its place via the still open neck 3 of the tube shown in FIG. 1. This is done as follows. The resilient strip 60 of the getter insertion apparatus shown in FIG. 7 is inserted into the neck 3 of the tube a distance such that the abutment member 73 bears against the open end of the tube neck 3. The pull cable 65 is then tensioned so that the strip 60 bends and the holder 61 is moved towards the high voltage contact 15 with the connection member 20. Access to the high voltage contact is provided via a slot-shaped recess 80 in the magnetic screening cone 12, as shown in FIG. 1. The location of the abutment number 73 on the insertion apparatus is such that in the bent condition of the strip 60, the aperture 32 provided in the connection strip 29 corresponds to the location of the connection member 20 so that, when the strip 60 is bent, the connection strip 29 slides over the widening end of the connection member 20. The strip 29 is then moved in its longitudinal direction until the second aperture 34 coincides with the connection member 20. In this phase of the method, the connection strip 29 is detached from the holder 61 by tensioning the cable 70 so that the stud 68 rotates and the connection strip 29 is pressed between the studs 72. Due to the resilience of the connection strip 29, the strip presses against the gradually widening end of the connection member 20 at the area of the aperture 34. Thus the coupling of the strip 29 and the connection member 20 is produced in the manner as shown in FIG. 2 or FIG. 5.
The principle of inserting and securing a getter in the tube has been explained with reference to a manually operated apparatus. Of course, the operation of the apparatus can be mechanized. Detaching the connection strip of the getter from the holder can furthermore be realised in ways differing from that with the stud 68. For example, as shown in FIG. 7B, the holder 90 may consist of two portions 91 and 92 pivoting about a shaft 83. To detach the connection strip of the getter, the part 92 of the holder 90 is tilted in the direction of the arrow 94. According to another possibility, the holder can be made detachable by a construction in which the parts 91 and 92 are drawn apart in the longitudinal direction of the holder.
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