Early Television  
Mechanical TV History How it Works Mechanical Sets at the Museum Gallery Database Summary Broadcasting Technical Inforation Restoration Advertising Articles Roger DuPouy's Site Peter Yanczer's Site Gerolf Poetschke's Site Eckhard Etzold's Site
Early Electronic Television History American Sets at the Museum British Sets at the Museum Gallery Database Summary Broadcasting CRTs Accessories Technical Information Restoration Advertising Articles Gerolf Poetschke's Site Eckhard Etzold's Site
Postwar American TV History American Sets at the Museum British/Europen TV History British/Europen Sets at the Museum TV in the Rest of the World Gallery of Unusual Sets Broadcasting CRTs Accessories Technical Information Restoration Advertising Articles Eckhard Etzold's Site
Early Color TV History Sets at the Museum Gallery Database Summary Broadcasting CRTs Accessories Technical Information Restoration Advertising Articles Pete Deksnis's Site Ed Reitan's Color Television History Eckhard Etzold's Site
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Postwar Television

Postwar Broadcasting

In the 30s the Image Dissector camera tube was invented by Philo Farnsworth. About 1934 the first iconoscope cameras were developed by RCA.

  • Postwar broadcast equipment at the Museum
  • Postwar American TV stations
  • Gallery of postwar broadcast equipment
  • Database of surviving early cameras

More on Postwar Broadcasting

  • AMA Television Handbook - WBKB
  • Amateur television broadcasting
  • Austin Company - TV transmitter facility
  • Astoria, Oregon Cable Television
  • Camera tubes
  • The Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II
  • George Fathauer, founder of Dage
  • Industrial television cameras
  • KSD-TV program schedule - March 1948
  • Los Angeles advertising rate cards - 1950
  • Other Remote television vans
  • Provideo Coalition articles by Richard Wirth
  • The Pulse of New York Television - 1948 audience survey
  • Pye Brochure
  • RCA Antenna on the Empire State Building
  • RCA broadcast equipment price sheet - 1948
  • RCA remote television vans
  • Recording Television
  • Resolution charts
  • Technical Information
  • Televising from an airplane
  • Televising the 1948 London Olympics
  • Television microwave and cable networks
  • TVX broadcast stations

 


 
Early Television Museum
5396 Franklin St., Hilliard, OH 43026
(614) 771-0510
info@earlytelevision.org