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As I understand it the Apollo 11 tv camera was installed upside down on it's
mount, and the initial picture of Neil Armstrong coming down the ladder was upside down. They flipped it over in seconds though on the TV coverage. This isn't strictly a spaceflight question, but I'm curious as to how they were able to flip or rotate a TV picture in 1969. It's easy now with digital technology. I'm not too knowledgeable about analogue TV electronics. Can anyone explain to me how it was done? Thanks, David |
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David Findlay wrote:
As I understand it the Apollo 11 tv camera was installed upside down on it's mount, and the initial picture of Neil Armstrong coming down the ladder was upside down. They flipped it over in seconds though on the TV coverage. This isn't strictly a spaceflight question, but I'm curious as to how they were able to flip or rotate a TV picture in 1969. It's easy now with digital technology. I'm not too knowledgeable about analogue TV electronics. Can anyone explain to me how it was done? Thanks, David It's actually even easy to do with an analog scan TV. Instead of scanning the CRT from left to right from the top down, scan from right to left from the bottom up. No big deal really and I'm pretty sure they did have just such a button to flip the scan direction over on their system. Not to mention that the scan rate conversion scheme was so primitive - they pointed a vidicon 30 fps camera at a B&W slow phosphor CRT that displayed the 10 fps video coming down from the moon. The could have simply rotated the vidicon 180 degrees if they so desired (but I don't think this is actually what they did, they were prepared to invert the scan direction). |
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It's actually even easy to do with an analog scan TV. Instead of
scanning the CRT from left to right from the top down, scan from right to left from the bottom up. No big deal really and I'm pretty sure they did have just such a button to flip the scan direction over on their system. Of course. I just hadn't thought of the the phosphor scanning the opposite way to normal. How silly of me. Thanks! David |
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...Just as simple with Analog as it is with Digital. Just invert the
incoming horizontal and vertical sync pulses so that the picture is rotated 180 degrees. Interestingly enough, about 1/10th of the color TVs and something like 80% of the B&W models manufactured prior to 1977 - before TV manufacturers started using ICs in the tuners to provide Phase Locked Loop frequency stabilization - have a switch, jumper or at least a trace on the mainboard that will allow for a TV repair crook to flip the picture in this way, as well as another to flip by just the vertical axis. The latter flip allowed any TV with such a circuit to be used as a teleprompter by reversing the picture so that text reflected off a see-thru mirror could be read by the news anchor(s). Thanks, makes sense now.. Thanks, David |
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