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Old January 9th 04, 12:04 AM
Steve Nosko
 
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P.S. Do the camcorders really use magnetic deflection???

Steve

"Steve Nosko" wrote in message
...
Don't think a pix will help much. It has what looks like the dark grey
aquadag coating making any internal observations impossible. My sacnner

out
of commission, but there's one at work. I should try to see if I can get

a
good rendition of the printing though. Thanks.
Steve

"Michael A. Terrell" wrote in message
...
Steve Nosko wrote:

I have a 3/4 or perhaps 1" CRT. Possibly from a camcorder, don't

know.
Haven't been able to find anything. The wearable computer sites may

be
a
possibility, but I didn't see any leads so far. I want to use it for

a
portable DF system.
The number is unreadable. It has yellow ink printing not etched.

What
could be the manufacturer: an "N" followed by what looks like a

backwards
somewhat stylized "B" What there is of a number looks like R2 then

possibly
a 1 and most likely a 5. So it sort-of looks like R215, but much of

the
ink
is gone. Standard 9 pin. Pins 4-5 must be the filament since they

show
4
ohms cold. about 1" dia & 2" long. How about some ideas???

--
Steve N, K,9,d, c. i at arrl net will reach me, no commas, of

course.

If it is from a camcorder, it should have a deflection yoke. How
about some pictures? It might trigger someone to recognize it.

Suitable newsgroups a
news:alt.binaries.schematics.electronic
news:alt.binaries.pictures.radio

Also, you can lay small parts on a flatbed scanner, cover them with a
sheet of white paper, and put a light over the paper to reduce shadows.
Yo can get good close-ups this way. I usually scan at 600 DPI, and
reduce image size to what I want. I would post a picture, an ask the
guys on news:sci.electronics.repair if anyone there can identify it.

--
We now return you to our normally scheduled programming.

Take a look at this little cutie! ;-)
http://home.earthlink.net/~mike.terrell/photos.html

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida