Last night, I noticed a green spot in the lower right corner of my television screen. It’s only noticable when something red is in that area. I have stereo speakers adjacent to the TV and I know speakers have magnets and I vaguely remember that magnets can affect video screens so I’m guessing this is the problem.
My question is how do magnets cause this? I only have a vague idea how television screens work - isn’t there something about photons being shot at the backside of the screen in three different wave lengths? Do the magnets only affect the red wave length? Do magnets affect the new flat screen TVs which I assume work in a different method?
What’s happened is the screen’s shadow mask has become magnetized.
(The shadowmask is a perforated grid that seperates the red, blue, and green phospors.)
It should eventually degauss on its own, if your TV doesn’t have a built-in degaussing feature.
This link will fill in the blanks: (In fact I see I’m spreading bad info above-- the screen doesn’t separate red, green, and blue-- it separates groups of red, green, and blue phosphors. Sorry!)
Depending on the polarity of the affected area’s magnetic field, the electron stream is pulled off its intended target. Say the green channel is always the bottom pixel of each group of three, and the stream is being forced down, so that even if the colour guns are aiming for the red or blue, they hit the green.
I had a Zenith TV with a big green spot on one side and a big red spot on the other. It got worse over time, not better. Add in a blurry image, and I got a new Samsung, with component jacks for a very nice picture when watching DVDs.
Larry Mudd, cool, thank you for the link! That’s exactly what I wanted to know. (wow, that site also has a great explanation of how a VCR tape works which I’ve always wondered about).
Not photons. Electrons. The electron beam excites the phosphors in the screen, and the phosphors glow in response.
All my tvs once had a green spot in the same location. Since it was on all of them, I figured it must be the cable tv companies doing.