CurtPalme.com Home Theater sales, calibration, service, and discussion forum. Hundreds of free manuals & setup tips.
   


 
Sign up and receive the latest newsletters by email!     Join the Forum discussions!    
    Site Map  
Home Products
For Sale
Referral
List
Photo
Gallery
Links Contact
Us
CRT Primer
Troubleshooting Tips
Mounting Methods
Definitive CRT
Projector Setup Guide
Tube/Raster Setup
Tube Condition (Wear)
Projector
Specifications
Projector Rankings
Video Processors
Ampro 1500/2000
Ampro 2300/2600
Ampro 3600/4600
Barco (Older Analog)
Barco 70x/Cine7  
Barco 500/800/801
Barco 808/Cine8
Barco 120x/Cine9
Dwin 500/700
Electrohome ECP 
Electrohome Marquee 
Mitsubishi
NEC PG
NEC XG
Panasonic 108x
Runco
Seleco
Sony 10xx
Sony 125x/127x
Sony 1292
Sony D50
Sony G70
Sony G90
Zenith 841/851
Zenith 895/900
Zenith 1200

Marquee Maintenance & Improvements
(by Mike Parker)

  (Page 11)

Back to Advanced Procedures Index

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
 

 



 

9. How to "HOT ROD" a Marquee

Here we go. Now for those of you who like bending the rules, and putting 8 cylinder engines on motorcycles, 200 watt amps on 6" speakers, etc.

Here is how you "Hot Rod" the video chain. As you may already know, with the exception of three coupling caps, the entire video chain in the Marquee is directly coupled (DC) from the BNC connectors to the CRT's.

The front end of the VIM is where you'd find these coupling caps. There is one on each input (RGB). Direct coupling is better, but it has it's drawbacks, and that is that if the DC offset is off on the source (input) device, it will effect the offset in the video chain of the projector. When the DC level (offset) is off, you'll then effect the blanking level (this is the reference for black). And from there you can forget about the great black level feature of this CRT.

So what they do is add these coupling caps and make the front end AC coupled, meaning that the caps will block DC, and only pass the AC signal. But it's not that simple, because once you AC couple you'll have to get and keep the DC offset at zero, so they add a circuit called a "DC Restore Circuit" and this circuit would keep the video front end DC level to zero, and if the following circuits are designed properly, the entire video chain would have a balanced (0) DC level. Therefore with proper DC level, we will have proper blanking level and black levels. So our goal is to not effect this feature in our quest to improve the projector.

To enhance the performance of the video chain, change the value of these three caps (C33, C49 and C65). The value is 470N or 0.47 ufd. If you increase the capacitance the picture would get hotter, but don't use electrolytics (especially polarized electrolytics). If you use electrolytics, you'll force DC reference into the video chain whenever there is bright scenes. The DC restore circuit will correct this, but it may not do it fast enough because of longer charge on the higher value cap. For instance, if you double the value of the coupling caps (0.94 ufd), you'll may also be putting the circuit outside of the speed of the DC restore circuit, because there is also a cap in that circuit that holds a charge. So what you may experience by doing one thing, you would more likely be effecting something else. So the "hot rod" effect of changing out C33, C49 and C65 would not be a miracle improvement, though this works well in high end audio (there's no need for DC restoration). It could be a problem in video.

I'm of the opinion that you cannot drastically improve on the performance of a Marquee, and that's mostly based on the fact that the video chain has a very wide bandwidth, and the components that were used (upgrades) were very high performance devices. Still there's room for improvements, but I would think that the end results would be more subtle than drastic.

The video chain in a marquee is very well designed. And this means of hot rodding could cause effect to the video chains DC offset level. You'll experience a brighter and falsely more dynamic picture, but pay close attention to the black bars from the test disk.

Now, here's a nugget. You can improve on the video chain, by replacing that cap with the same value (0.47 ufd), go from a 50vdc to a very high quality 100 vdc poly. The change would be subtle, but noticeable if you're using a high quality input source.

Did you find this information useful? Please consider making a donation to help defray the cost of managing and hosting future articles, tips, and documents.     
Or purchase from Amazon.com and a small percentage automatically goes to support this site at no extra cost to you! Visit their Blu-ray and 4K UHD stores for sales. Want to show off your home theater? See our Blu-ray Release List & Must-Have Titles. Shop at Amazon.com and support our site!


... Previous Page

Back to Page 1


 

© Copyright CurtPalme.com. All Rights Reserved.