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Sony KV-32S42, a typical late-model Trinitron television, manufactured in 2001 Sony FD Trinitron flat-screen CRT Sony Trinitron KV-27FS100, example of an FD Trinitron model with a more boxy appearance. Sony's patent on the Trinitron display ran out in 1996, after 20 years.
With the introduction of the FD Trinitron, Sony also introduced a new industrial style, leaving the charcoal-colored sets introduced in the 1980s for a new silver styling. In 2001, the FD Trinitron WEGA series had become the top selling television model in the United States. [3] By 2003, over 40 million sets had been sold worldwide. [4]
Sony continued to use the WEGA brand until 2005, when liquid-crystal displays superseded the company's Trinitron aperture grille-based CRT models. [ 5 ] Starting in 1998, Sony released a television line called FD Trinitron/WEGA , a flat-screen television with side-mounted speakers and a silver-coloured cabinet.
Model Size Resolution Light source Contrast HDMI Notes References KDF-37H1000 37" 1280x720 Projection 2 [22] KDF-50E3000 50" 1080p: Projection 2 [23] KDS-50A2020 50" 1080p: Projection KDS-55A2020 55" 1080p: Projection KDS-60A2020 60" 1080p: Projection 20S3000 20" 1366x768 1 26S3000 26" 1366x768 2 32S3000 32" 1366x768 2 40S3000 40" 1366x768 2 ...
1968 marked the release of Sony Trinitron brand with the model KV-1310, which was based on Aperture Grille technology. It was acclaimed to have improved the output brightness. The Trinitron screen was identical with its upright cylindrical shape due to its unique triple cathode single gun construction.
XBR is a line of LCD, OLED, Plasma, Rear Projection, and CRT televisions produced by Sony.According to Sony, XBR is an acronym for eXtended Bit Rate, although there is evidence that it originally stood for "Project X, Black Remote" which was meant to distinguish it from the then-standard line of Sony televisions. [1]
The first patented aperture grille televisions were manufactured under the Trinitron brand name. Fine vertical wires behind the front glass of the display screen separate the different colors of phosphors into strips. These wires are positioned such that an electron beam from one of three guns at the rear of the tube is only able to strike ...
The AudioVision 14 uses the same 14-inch CRT as the Macintosh Color Display. [5] It is the only display to use the HDI-45 connector [citation needed] (which Apple called the Integrated Desktop Connector), capable of transferring video to the screen, video capture input from an S-Video source, audio output, audio input, and Apple Desktop Bus (ADB) all through one cable, with plug and play support.