50 years, we've come a long way....or have we??

Dan Murphy

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Since the very first all-electronic RCA color TV rolled off an Indiana production line 50 years ago this week, the Consumer Electronics Association records that Americans have purchased more than half a billion color television sets. In fact, the color TV has become a ubiquitous symbol of prosperity. The average American home has four color TV sets - and today the color TV is the number one wedding gift for newlyweds in China.

The very first RCA color TV was dubbed "The Merrill," model CT-100, and it sold for a suggested retail price of $1,000 in 1954 - roughly equivalent to $6,000 in today's money and about the same price as an automobile for the 1950's consumer. Featuring an innovative 15-inch Tri-color picture tube, fewer than 5,000 of the first RCA CT-100 color TV receivers were produced in that first year. Today, Thomson's high-volume television manufacturing facilities can produce more RCA digital high-definition color TV receivers in two days than RCA was able to make in the initial year of all-electronic color TV production.

Fewer than 25 of the original CT-100 models are known to be in working condition, including two CT-100 units at Thomson's RCA consumer products headquarters in Indianapolis. A working CT-100 will be featured on a special remote broadcast on QVC that will celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the first all-electronic RCA color TV and offer an opportunity for viewers to purchase the latest RCA high-definition TV technology for their living rooms.

All-Electronic Compatible Color

"To create television in color 'as red as any rose' was a gigantic task," noted Radio Corporation of America Chairman of the Board, Brigadier General David Sarnoff in 1954. "To televise an apple and have it appear as an apple was problem enough. But to televise a pretty girl - the true color of her hair, eyes, lips and facial features - added to the complexity of the task."

After a competing mechanical system had won initial endorsement from government officials, Sarnoff spearheaded RCA's crash "compatible color" program to develop the first 15-inch RCA color TV receiver and the critical elements of what became the National Television System Committee (NTSC) electronic color TV system. Compatible with existing black-and-white TV broadcasting and with more than 10 million TV sets in homes in the early 1950's, the analog NTSC system of color broadcasting is still going strong even with the transition to the high-definition digital TV standard developed by Advanced Television System Committee (ATSC) that was endorsed by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission just over seven years ago. As with the introduction of color TV, the rollout of HDTV started slowly and is now running at "full steam ahead" with more than 20 television networks producing HDTV material and HDTV product sales expected to exceed 5.3 million units this year, bringing HDTV into more than 10% of American homes by the end of 2004.

The March 25, 1954 production of the first all-electronic RCA color TV was marked by RCA's decision to immediately license its technology to 70 competing manufacturers. RCA had originally estimated that it would take six months to ramp up color TV production after the December 1953 approval of the NTSC standard by the FCC. Instead, the company was able to mobilize its facilities to ship the first color TV receivers less than 100 days after the government endorsed the NTSC system. The RCA CT-100 color TV has a total of 1,012 parts including 36 receiving tubes and the 15-inch color TV picture tube, along with approximately 150 feet of wire. A single set weighs more than 160 pounds.

"The CT-100 is an engineering marvel, with a specially-developed cathode ray tube that used color phosphors with correct chromaticity that corresponds exactly to the NTSC color TV standard. The red and green of the CT-100 is more rich and saturated than the orange-red and yellow-green of modern sets," explains color TV historian Ed Reitan, a recognized expert in early color television broadcasting and receivers. Reitan's website is a goldmine of information about early color television (http://www.novia.net/~ereitan).

Color TV Stalled by Lack of Programming

"Despite the substantial investments in color TV and the early introduction of color TV models by more than two dozen manufacturers, RCA was the lone holdout still selling color television models by 1960. There just wasn't enough color TV programming on the air to make it a viable business for most manufacturers," Reitan explains.

"Today's transition to HDTV in many ways parallels the rollout of color programming and color TV receivers. The first coast-to-coast color network broadcast was NBC's coverage of the Tournament of Roses Parade, which was sent to 21 network stations and viewed on 200 specially-built experimental RCA color TV receivers that were rushed to local affiliate stations three months before the first consumer color TV sets were manufactured. RCA-owned NBC began 'colorcasting' 1954, and only 68 hours of color programs were broadcast by NBC that entire year. It would be two years before the famous NBC peacock would appear on color TV screens," Reitan says.

The first regular network TV series broadcast in color was NBC's The Marriage, a sitcom starring Jessica Tandy and Hume Cronyn that made its debut broadcast on July 8, 1954. The first full-length Broadway production on ever shown on color TV was the March 7, 1955 colorcast of Peter Pan, which drew a record audience of 65 million people. With only a handful of TV studios capable of color broadcasting, the transition to color by local TV stations was done slowly on a market-by-market basis. Washington, D.C. got local the ability to originate local color TV broadcasts when President Eisenhower pressed a button that turned the station from black-and-white to color (on live television) on May 22, 1958.

The premiere of NBC's Sunday night program Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color in September of 1961 made a dramatic impact on the buying public, however, sparking rejuvenated color TV set sales. CBS began regular colorcasts in the fall of 1965, and NBC became the first 100% color network in 1966 - fully 12 years after the introduction of the first RCA color TV, the CT-100.

Time Warp Television

Texas collector Fred Hoffman is the CEO of a local TV broadcasting company and owns two of the vintage RCA CT-100 color TV sets, as well as several other historic models.

"I really do think the colors on the original tubes with 'real' NTSC decoding are far more accurate than even my new plasma screen TV. The picture isn't as bright but the colors are vivid and true. As for why I have them, it is the pleasure of knowing that a piece of television history will be preserved at least for as long as I'm around and hopefully someone in the future will appreciate the significance of these classic television sets. If they do, I can only hope they preserve them to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the CT-100."

And a CT-100 has been with New Jersey collector Pete Deksnis for 40 years, since he purchased it from a fellow student in northeast Philadelphia in 1963. At that time, the CT-100 was a mere $45 investment.

"In those days, the set was used only for color broadcasts a few hours each week. Today, collectors do not use a CT-100 as an everyday viewing tool. A restored CT-100 will languish for months at a time until it is brought to life to enjoy for another hour or so. Today the job or restoration is far more complicated. Fifty-year-old parts deteriorate. Parts no longer available from distributors must be specially made -- a high-voltage transformer used in CT-100 convergence circuits is hand-cloned by an artisan in England," says the Deksnis, who maintains a website that pays homage to the hard-to-find original RCA color TV (http://home.att.net/~pldexnis).

"Fifty years ago, the development of compatible color television was a significant and difficult technical achievement. The CT-100 is a fascinating part of that story. Watching one operate is a living time warp back to the 1950's," Deksnis says

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I love stuff like that. Thanks Dan.

I also think it would be cool to have one of those really old TV's - just for it's nostalgia value.:D
 

I kind of feel like I just got off of CoP!

Remember the NBC peacock opening it's tail "in living color" and the little jingle that played as this happened?
 
My dad tells me stories of their first tv way back when. He said it was only on for a couple hours each day and when it wasn't broadcasting, they would sit around looking at the test pattern!!! :crazy: He said they had one of the first tvs on their block and all the neighbors would want to come over to visit! :jester:
 
I remember getting up before dawn on Saturday to watch cartoons and watching the test pattern until "the broadcast day began"! That was probably better than some of thing my kids want to watch today!
 
How about the national anthems, one by one, at the end of the day as the stations ended their days?
 
Some thngs i remember from way back then....

learning about the vertical and horizontal hold buttons....

taking the tubes to the store to test them.....

the picture tube going up in smoke.....

watching the Disney show on Sundays...

knowing the difference between VHF & UHF...

and...

pre-color tv....having that multi-colored screen to put in fron of the tv so we could pretend we had color....
 
Anyone ever tell their kids how many stations we had to choose from (I think I had abc, cbs, nbc, pbs, and 3 uhf ones)? :eek: I think kids today wouldn't know what to do!!:crazy: Remember the days when cartoons were on Sat. mornings and a couple hours after school only!!? ::yes::
 
Great memories. I recall that plastic film on the screen, blue at the top, beige in the middle and green at the bottom. I guess they figured all shows were westerns, outside.

Why was that one test pattern an Indian, or Native American? On the UHF/VHF, seetingthe VHF first, then slowing tuning in the UHF till you struck pay dirt.

The circular screen, about 10 inches, in a console the size of a small car?
 
Oh my, it's frightening to think I remember all that you are talking about!:o But they are great memories.

Ohhhh, the wait till the TV repairman came! Now we just pitch them and go buy a new one! :teeth:
 
I love tv. It truly is a window on the world.:D
 
Thanks for the picture of the old TV, Dan. It reminds me of the one my grandma had.

We didn't get a color TV until I was 5 years old. My kids find that hard to believe, like it should be on Ripley's or something!

To change a channel you had to come to a standing position, walk across the room and push a button where it stayed there until the program was over! What a concept! To actually watch an entire show!

How ever did we survive without the remote control?! :teeth:
 
I remember watching NBC in colour on my great aunt's set. Then we got a tv too, back in '67 or thereabouts.

As an aside, this same aunt went to Disneyland and then we went too after hearing how great it was.:D
 














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