• DocumentCode
    1049651
  • Title

    Synchronization af Television

  • Author

    Stoller, H.M. ; Morton, E.R.

  • Author_Institution
    Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y.
  • fYear
    1927
  • Firstpage
    940
  • Lastpage
    945
  • Abstract
    Synchronization of Television is the problem of holding two scanning disks so that their phase displacement is always less than four and one third minutes of arc. A 240 pole synchronous motor of the variable reluctance type is used as a basis. Coupled to it a direct curent motor carries the steady component of the load. Hunting is eliminated by a condenser in series with the two synchronous motors whose capacitance is slightly less than that required to tune the circuit. As the motor might lock into step in any of 120 possible angular positions, only one of which would give the proper phase relations, a two-pole motor, with only one locking position, was provided by tapping the armature of the direct current motor at two points and bringing out the leads to slip rings. This was used for synchronizing while the 240 pole motor, connected subsequently, held the close synchronism required. The disks rotate at 1062.5 rev. per min. which gives 17.7 cycles on the two-pole and 2125 cycles on the 240-pole motor. For transmission the synchronizing current is attenuated to a level of 0.6 milliwatt and amplified at the receiving end. The 17.7-cycle current is an undesirably low frequency for transmission over telephone cables and so is used to modulate a 760-cycle current through a polarized relay.
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    American Institute of Electrical Engineers, Transactions of the
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0096-3860
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/T-AIEE.1927.5061434
  • Filename
    5061434