Discovering the Analog vs. Digital Display in CRT and LCD TVs

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SUMMARY

The discussion clarifies that CRT (Cathode Ray Tube) displays are inherently analog devices, while LCD (Liquid Crystal Display) and plasma displays are typically configured as discretized output devices. CRTs can handle multiple resolutions without requiring digital upconversion due to their independent phosphor response to the electron beam. In contrast, modern digital displays like LCDs and OLEDs utilize fixed pixel arrangements, which necessitate digital processing for non-native resolutions. The conversation highlights the differences in image generation and resolution handling between these technologies.

PREREQUISITES
  • Understanding of CRT technology and its analog nature
  • Familiarity with LCD and plasma display configurations
  • Knowledge of digital signal processing in video displays
  • Awareness of resolution concepts in television technology
NEXT STEPS
  • Research the differences between analog and digital video signals
  • Explore the technology behind OLED displays and their pixel structure
  • Learn about the process of digital upconversion in modern TVs
  • Investigate the historical evolution of CRT technology and its applications
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Electronics enthusiasts, video technology professionals, and anyone interested in understanding the differences between analog and digital display technologies in televisions.

Sethi
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Hi All

This may sound funny or odd. But i want to know the display of the TV (CRT as well as LCD) is a analog or digital. I am talking about display only specifically. I know that inside TV there are circuits and it is digitally doing so many things. But when it come to display means generation of images on TV whether it is Digital or Analog
 
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A CRT is inherently a purely analog device.

However, since the input signal may be analog or 'digital' the output will be discretised if the input signal is digital.

An LCD or Plasma may be either, but are normally configured as discretised output devices.

The term 'digital' is inappropriate for the output of any device.
 
Thanks, Studiot :)
 
"digital" TV's such as DLP, LCD, plasma, ... have a fixed number of triplet (red green blue) rectangular pixels on the display, usually 1920x1080 these days on HDTVs. During each "refresh"" cycle, each bar of color can only have a fixed intensity. (see image below). Non-native resolutions, such as standard def 740x480 with .9 width to height dot aspect ratio have to be digitally upconverted for a hi-def digtal HDTV. OLED tv's use one LED for each dot of color.

A single tube CRT also has a fixed number of triplet (red green blue) spots of phopspors. The spots can be rectagular and side by side (triniton type) similar to LCD panels, or round and arranged in alternating triangle patterns using some type of mask for each dot of color. The phosphors themselves have a much finer grain than the dot size, so a partial sweep of a beam only lights up a portion of each dot, allowing for image boundaries to occur within a dot, which allows CRTs to handle multiple resolutions (hi-def and standard def) without requiring digital up or down conversion. Because the phosphor grains respond independently to the electron beam, CRT monitors (used for computers) ignore mask boundaries and handle a wide range of resolutions without issue. (see image below).

A 3 tube CRT projector uses 3 tubes, red, green, blue, and no mask on any of the tubes. The image is controlled by the electron beam (beam width and sweep rate) in each tube. I think 2006 was the last year CRT rear projection HDTV's were made. They generally have two modes of beam rates, one for standard def 480p images, the other for 1080i images, and each mode needs to have the convergence of the images adjusted on a regular basis (2 to 4 times a year) to keep the images converged.

LCD panel image:

lcdpanel.jpg


OLED panel image, since the OLED's have diffrent brighness levels, the sizes are smallest for green, largest for blue:

oled.jpg





Shadow mask CRT image, note the outer dots are partially lit up corresponding to the edges of the arrow:

crtshadowmask.jpg
 
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