Cromaclear
Encyclopedia
Cromaclear is a CRT
Cathode ray tube
The cathode ray tube is a vacuum tube containing an electron gun and a fluorescent screen used to view images. It has a means to accelerate and deflect the electron beam onto the fluorescent screen to create the images. The image may represent electrical waveforms , pictures , radar targets and...

 technology pioneered by NEC during the mid to late-90s. It was claimed that Cromaclear could offer the image clarity and sharpness of the Trinitron
Trinitron
Trinitron is Sony's brand name for its line of aperture grille based CRTs used in television sets and computer display monitors. One of the first truly new television systems to enter the market since the 1950s, the Trinitron was announced in 1966 to wide acclaim for its bright images, about 25%...

 and Diamondtron aperture grille
Aperture grille
An aperture grille is one of two major technologies used to manufacture color cathode ray tube televisions and computer displays; the other is shadow mask....

 CRTs without the disadvantages e.g. the horizontal damping wires.

Description

Cromaclear is a CRT display technology that combines the best features of shadow mask and aperture grille monitors. Utilizing a similar mask design already established in the television industry Cromaclear displays video well.

The most significant difference between Cromaclear CRTs and existing CRT technologies is their viewable phosphor pattern. When combined with the slot mask, the red, green and blue (RGB) P22 phosphors of a Cromaclear CRT appear elliptical in shape, compared to round phosphors (used in shadow mask CRTs) and stripes (used in aperture grille CRTs). The illuminated phosphors of a Cromaclear CRT are also grouped into separate bundles of three in a vertical alignment with the goal of improved clarity and focus.

With Cromaclear CRTs, the conventional "dot pitch" measurement is no longer as accurate. The term "mask pitch" is more appropriate when discussing this specification. A mask pitch measurement is the distance between like-colored phosphors on a Cromaclear mask. The mask pitch of a Cromaclear screen is 0.25 mm.

Image quality

Overall monitor image quality is difficult to quantify. Given the inherent complex nature of CRTs, a variety of factors combine to produce a monitor’s image. These factors — focus, contrast and color saturation — all come into play when deciding which monitor and technology provides the "best" image. When discussed in relation to Cromaclear, these items need further explanation.
  • Focus: Cromaclear incorporates a new SDF-ELA (Single Dynamic Focus - Expanded Large Aperture) gun for 15-inch tubes and DQF- ELA (Dynamic Quadrupole Focus - Expanded Large Aperture) gun for 17-inch tubes. These guns provide uniform image clarity and focus. When viewing images in monitors’ corners, other CRTs could distort image ratio and perspective. Using the Cromaclear-specific ELA gun, this problem is virtually eliminated. This also provides improvements for viewing six-point text and fine, single-pixel elements.


As a consequence of Cromaclear's new mask form, the electron beam used to pass through the slot mask had to be adapted to match. The ELA gun utilized for Cromaclear has an exact beam/mask match (an elliptical electron beam passes through an elliptical mask opening) for optimum power transfer from electron beam to screen phosphors.

Although it was possible to use existing round phosphor gun technology with Cromaclear, a certain percentage of electron power would have been lost, thereby degrading overall image focus. An effective visual to describe this phenomenon is a "round peg, square hole" analogy: while contact might be taking place, it’s not completely precise. Excess energy transfer could lead to a warped grille or mask, resulting in possible image degradation (color purity and/or brightness uniformity problems). This mismatch tends to occur in aperture grille CRTs (stripe grille/circular electron beam). On the other hand, shadow mask CRTs match a circular beam to a circular shadow mask.

This combination of dynamic beam focus and new electron guns also reduces the need for end-user moiré and convergence controls while enhanced brightness provides improved contrast.

Convergence

Convergence is the process of controlling the CRT beam deflection to keep the red, green and blue beams properly overlapped when scanning the raster (area illuminated by the scan lines on a CRT). As the electron gun scans across the screen, the shape of electron beams slightly varies as the beam reaches the outer edges of the screen. Misconvergence, the technical term used when this process is not completely accurate, appears as color fringing on the edge of an image displayed on the screen. For example, a CRT monitor with misaligned electron beams will show a white "H" on a black background with one of the primary or secondary colors shadowing its edges. Cromaclear provides deterrents to misconvergence, including the ELA guns and their tight mask pitch.

Cromaclear vs. aperture grille CRTs

Aperture grille
Aperture grille
An aperture grille is one of two major technologies used to manufacture color cathode ray tube televisions and computer displays; the other is shadow mask....

 CRT monitors currently use damping wires to hold the black striping in place between the phosphors. Comparatively, Cromaclear utilizes a type of shadow mask that does not require the use of damping wires. Damping wires can sometimes be visible to the user under extreme white plain background displays and mechanically obstruct the flow of the electron beams, critical to maximizing image focus. The Cromaclear shadowmask, however, still has much more impeding metal than an aperture grill mask, leading overall to a darker, softer picture than the equivalent aperture grill CRT. The impact of damping wires of the aperture grill CRT, is far less than the total extra metal in the cromaclear mask which is effectively like having a thick damping wire for each row of phosphor. This in turn means that the cromaclear CRT needs a much more powerful electron beam to illuminate the phosphors brightly, which reduces the overall life of the CRT and its focusing ability, which is the most expensive part of any CRT monitor or television.

Damping wires are sensitive and are more susceptible to shipping damage, but usually the glass would be broken before the damping wires give way, making aperture grill CRTs equally robust to any other under normal conditions. They also have the potential to be affected by harmonic distortion when speakers are placed near the CRT, however for this to be a visible problem the speakers would need to be impractically close to the screen and producing a very high sound output, so in effect this effect would have to be contrived by speaker position rather than a problem in operation.

Additionally since aperture grill CRTs have no "horizontal" elements to the shadow mask, the resolution of the CRT in the vertical direction is limited by the focus of the electron beam and the granularity of the phosphor, unlike Cromaclear and other shadow mask based CRTs whose vertical resolution is limited by the number of rows of metal in the mask. Since the aperture grill CRT also has the least metal in it allowing the best focusing and brightest pictures, they inherently produce the highest resolution CRT displays. High quality, high resolution computer CRT monitors nearly always have aperture grill CRTs for this very reason.

Cromaclear vs. "conventional" shadow mask CRTs

Cromaclear CRTs improve upon the image sharpness and focus attributed to shadow mask
Shadow mask
The shadow mask is one of two major technologies used to manufacture cathode ray tube televisions and computer displays that produce color images. The other approach is aperture grille, better known by its trade name, Trinitron. All early color televisions and the majority of CRT computer monitors...

 based dot trio CRTs. The slot mask design and illuminated phosphor alignment provide a tighter mask pitch, leading to improved image quality. In addition, the tighter mask pitch and ELA guns enhance focus and combat moiré.

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK