Metal cog associated with the "Cintel" twin-lens flying-spot telecine

Made:
1957 in England
maker:
Unidentified and Cintel
SMG00289330

Buy this image as a print 

Buy

License this image for commercial use at Science and Society Picture Library

License

SMG00289330
Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Metal cog associated with the "Cintel" twin-lens flying-spot telecine, unsigned [very probably Cintel], c.1957

Films are televised either by combining a film projector with a television camera or by means of a ‘flying-spot scanner’ such as this.

A moving spot of light, produced by a cathode-ray tube, was focussed onto the film, which rolled steadily through the machine. A photocell on the far side collected the transmitting light and hence generated a picture signal.

The machine had to transmit exactly one frame of film per television picture period. In practice, this meant that film had to be shown at 25 pictures per second on European television standards, and that this time of machine could not be used in the USA or any other country which transmitted at 30 pictures per second.

The flying-spot principle lent itself ideally to colour operation, since no problems of registration then arose. In later versions of this machine, designed for colour operation, the transmitted light was split into three separate beams, according to colour. These beams were collected by three photo-cells, to yield red, green, and blue signals respectively.

Details

Category:
Radio Communication
Object Number:
1971-384/6
Materials:
metal (unknown)
type:
cog
credit:
Rank Precision Industries Ltd.