Classic monochrome phosphors?

From: THETechnoid_at_home.com <(THETechnoid_at_home.com)>
Date: Wed Nov 29 09:04:09 2000

I've got a couple of mono (composite) monitors I'd let go of. One is an
Amdek Amber, and the other is a generic (green). Pay shipping, packaging
costs, and one of them is yours.

Regards,

Jeff

In <001128222312.202006a3_at_trailing-edge.com>, on 11/29/00
   at 10:04 AM, CLASSICCMP_at_trailing-edge.com said:

>Through the 80's and up into the early (Lasnerian) 90's, it was common to
>see monochrome video displays with *long* decay-time phosphors. As in
>hundreds of milliseconds, enough such that if you were a quick typist the
>cursor block left a very distinct trail going back a good fraction of a
>line :-)

>Does anyone know the designation (as in "P3" or "P25") of these
>long-lived green and yellow phosphors that were commonly used on IBM PC
>and PC-clone monochrome displays? Even better, anyone know of a source
>(new or used, preferably NTSC or Monochrome SVGA) for such monitors?

>Tim.

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THETechnoid_at_home.com
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Received on Wed Nov 29 2000 - 09:04:09 GMT

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