So. A while back while clearing Lucian's stuff. We took possession of some valves. In there was a Vidicon tube. I sadly had to return that as it went to the broadcast museum peeps.

Cut to yesterday when we got another batch of choobs from a friend..... Containing not one.
Not two.
But THREE Vidicon choobs o.o

This is how stuff was filmed on analogue TV o.o

It's effectively a back to front CRT.

The front is a special coating that can "store" an image that's being projected on it.
Then a scanning electron beam within the tube flashes across the front plate in the same manner as in a CRT. The electrons interact with the light and dark parts of the image and are spat out via a ring at the front.

One tube for black and white. Often 3 of them for colour.

@Jencen @asj weren't you working to turn one of these into a webcam once?
@crashtestdev @Jencen Yep, but I think the coating had failed somehow? I couldn't amplify any signal from it, despite being pretty sure my deflection was working.
@asj @crashtestdev must have been a hell of a lump to sit atop a monitor. What with the deflection yoke and lens assembly o.o
Kris\Slyka (@[email protected])

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@asj out of curiosity, how did you do your deflection? did you find an original deflection assembly or did you DIY it? Original deflection assemblies are super hard to come by and I'd love to be able to build them from scratch at some point
@slyka i wound them on a lathe with a lasercut jig, and tested with a very adorable soviet crt :)
@asj ohh, that's really cool! did you use a vidicon with electrostatic focus or did you also wind the focus coil?
@slyka it had electrostatic focus which saved quite a bit of effort. maybe i should try again sometime, it's possibly my amplifier was just not sensitive enough
@asj yeah, the amplification is tricky, the output levels are often just a few nanoampere and they're very susceptible to noise. I had to make a custom shielded mount for the tube and lens and use a very high gain transimpedance amplifier. Doing it on a breadboard was also a pain but I've just got a bunch of PCBs made to make the task easier in the future cause my ultimate goal is to build a digital vidicon still image camera from scratch. They're not tested yet but they're open source https://git.sr.ht/~slyka/vidicon-preamp
@slyka Ooh I will definitely take a look at that. thanks for sharing!