Specimen of Baird's 2-colour cathode ray tube for colour television (telechrome tube), 1944.
The only surviving example of John Logie Baird’s Telechrome, the world’s first colour television picture tube. It is a cathode-ray display tube for 2-colour and/or stereoscopic television and was developed between 1942-44 by Baird and only two assistants.
The 1943-44 television committee appointed to coordinate British television after the war (known as the Hankey Committee) recommended that a high-definition (1000-line) colour television system based on Baird’s Telechrome should be implemented after the end of the war. Due to the difficult post-war conditions and Baird’s premature death in 1946 these ambitious plans never materialised. The existing 405-line black-and-white television system developed by EMI in the pre-war period was expanded across Britain. British colour television broadcasts did not officially begin until 1967, over 20 years later.
Details
- Category:
- Television
- Object Number:
- 1962-48
- Materials:
- glass, copper (alloy) and coated metal
- Measurements:
-
overall (including stand): 470 mm x 200 mm x 880 mm, 0.5kg
- type:
- cathode ray tube
- credit:
- The National Media Museum, Bradford