I have the same questions. It is amazig how they can take an uneven
source and make it into a (almost) completely even background. I hope
someone has a patent on the idea.
&&&&&
Is it the same structure in LCD TVs ? Is it ust a lamp on each side giving
the central area the same illumination as at a side or the top or bottom of
a 4 foot or more screen. ?
I have some Sony FDL-X600 6" LCD video monitors which use a bent FL tube
behind the white layer, instead of along the sides.
The tube goes back ' forth widthwise with three 180 degree bends.. I don't
know if there would be a way to improvise the single lamp with several
smaller ones.
These monitors have some advanced features that most LCD units don't have,
such as a knob adjustment which electronically (not mechanically) improves
the image at different viewing angles, and switching for color temperature
in addition to the regularly included brightness, contrast, color and tint.
I generally like the display of LCDs for color and brightness, but watching
fast motion is bad on the cheap 22" Coby that I watch sometimes.
For computer monitors, LCDs are hard to beat for compactness and cooler
operating temperatures.
I don't know the special characteristics of the layers of diffusers used
behind LCDs, but I can notice a slightly darker band in the center of the
Coby, but only when the entire screen is at a black level (no video
displayed).. otherwise, it's not noticeable.
--
Cheers,
WB
.............
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