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It's clear from this magazine that early television was the domain of home tinkerers and hackers. On page 26 is a detailed tutorial on how to construct your own selenium condenser cell from scratch, including which London chemist had appropriately high-quality selenium, where to buy copper sheets, mica insulator (.008 thick) and brass bars.
That analog television not only was prototyped nearly a hundred years ago but then began being deployed at vast consumer scale ~75 years ago is still just so amazing. It's worth understanding a bit about how it works just to appreciate what a wildly ambitious hack it was. From real-time image acquisition to transmission to display, many of the fundamental technologies didn't even exist and had to be invented then perfected for it to work.
And at 1500 RPM no less.
"Don't sit too close to the television, Timmy, it might cut off your arm."
As best I can tell, the 180 line system was used with CRTs: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/180-line_television_system
https://web.archive.org/web/20260413085517/https://www.tvdaw...