After watching that video, I feel more guilt about how I loved to throw 
them into the local storm drain just so we could hear the BOOM !  The 
addiction got so bad that I would sometimes ride my bike to the local TV 
repair show, grab a tube from the dumpster, and ride home no-hands (yes, 
can you believe how stupid someone can be to ride a bike carrying a glass 
picture tube...) just so I could break it.

We did a not-so-nice dissection of a 21FJP22 tube in the mid 1970s. It 
started out by breaking the neck with a CB antenna. We covered the neck 
with a small rag to reduce glass-shatter, but the* rag got sucked into the 
tube* from the vacuum!     Since we could not get the rag out, we tossed 
some bits of paper, twigs, and squirted-in some charcoal lighter and 
proceeded to burn-out the rag. Surprisingly, the small fire was barely 
visible from the front of the TV. Fearing his parents might smell the 
smoke, we got the garden hose and put out the fire. When the father came 
out to ask if we found out what we wrong with the TV, we said it has leaked 
water inside from condensation. You have to understand that his father 
taught English, not science, so he accepted that explanation. OK, so what 
do you do with a half-broken TV tube ? We broke-away most of the thinner 
glass (the funnel-shaped structure from the film), but once we got to the 
face, the glass got very thick. So, that was taken out to the front yard 
and chopped into bits with an axe. Nice to know the front was safety glass, 
but that made the job more difficult. We had fun tearing-away the 
shadow-mask with pliers. It literally tore away like cloth.

Thanks for posting the video; it really makes you appreciate what went into 
those tubes.

On Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 2:40:59 PM UTC-8 orange_glow_fan wrote:

> When Color TV's first came on the market in the early 50's all of them had 
> round CRT's. The first ones were 15" CRT's. Around 1954 RCA introduced a 
> 21" round CRT and they were the standard until around 1963 when the first 
> rectangular CRTS entered the market. I suspect this film was made during 
> the short  time when both versions were available. The first practical, 
> consumer color tv was introduced by RCA in 1953 and they sold about 4,000 
> of them at a cost of $1,000, about $8,000 dollars in 2021 dollars...
>
>
> On Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 4:19:16 PM UTC-5 Bill van Dijk wrote:
>
>> I believe the round tubes were for the cheaper TVs.
>>
>>  
>>
>>  
>>
>> *From:* [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] *On 
>> Behalf Of *Yohan Park
>> *Sent:* Thursday, January 07, 2021 3:50 PM
>> *To:* neonixie-l <[email protected]>
>> *Subject:* [neonixie-l] Re: Fascinating film about 1960s colour CRT 
>> manufacturing
>>
>>  
>>
>> Enjoyed watching that, thanks for sharing.
>> Any idea what the large round tubes were used for back then?
>>
>> On Thursday, January 7, 2021 at 1:40:27 PM UTC+1 mikeselectricstuff wrote:
>>
>> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7IrSLPVkxCo 
>>
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