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RLOD#3 (07.05.2020) 1986 Pефлектор ИЛД3-С

The ИЛД3-С is a Soviet-made blue cathodoluminescent pixel lamp that was used giant displays and scoreboards. The tube features a very basic electron optics which floods the electroluminescent screen with a fast electrical current through vacuum. The spot size can be changed by varying the voltage applied to one of the secondary anodes though. In order to prevent the development of a negative space charge around the luminous end of the lamp, that side of the tube is coated with an electrically-conducting fluorine-doped tin oxide layer so as to provide a return path for electrons which can then be collected by the anode, thereby closing the circuit. Interestingly, the electroluminescent phosphor used in this lamp is a cerium-doped yttrium silicate material instead of the usual silver-doped zinc sulfide found in blue-emitting CRTs. In this particular design half of the emitted light is lost at the back of the lamp, an issue that could have been solved easily with a very thin aluminum coating applied behind the phosphor layer, a solution that was implemented in standard television and video projector CRTs.


Keywords: Lamps

RLOD#3 (07.05.2020) 1986 Pефлектор ИЛД3-С


The ИЛД3-С is a Soviet-made blue cathodoluminescent pixel lamp that was used giant displays and scoreboards. The tube features a very basic electron optics which floods the electroluminescent screen with a fast electrical current through vacuum. The spot size can be changed by varying the voltage applied to one of the secondary anodes though. In order to prevent the development of a negative space charge around the luminous end of the lamp, that side of the tube is coated with an electrically-conducting fluorine-doped tin oxide layer so as to provide a return path for electrons which can then be collected by the anode, thereby closing the circuit. Interestingly, the electroluminescent phosphor used in this lamp is a cerium-doped yttrium silicate material instead of the usual silver-doped zinc sulfide found in blue-emitting CRTs. In this particular design half of the emitted light is lost at the back of the lamp, an issue that could have been solved easily with a very thin aluminum coating applied behind the phosphor layer, a solution that was implemented in standard television and video projector CRTs.

SB160-reries.jpg Philips_SOXC_22-26W_-_NL_m1980s_a.jpg 2020-05-07_Reflektor_ILD3-S.jpg 2020-05-06_Philips_MPDL_35W_DV27.jpg Orion_HgMIF_400W_-_HU_1989.jpg
Lamp/Fixture Information
Manufacturer:Pефлектор (Reflector)
Model Reference:ИЛД3-С (ILD3-S)
Lamp
Lamp Type:Vacuum electroluminescent
Filament/Radiator Type:Electroluminescence
File information
Filename:2020-05-07_Reflektor_ILD3-S.jpg
Album name:Max / Random lamp of the day
Keywords:Lamps
Filesize:502 KiB
Date added:Aug 29, 2024
Dimensions:1200 x 800 pixels
Displayed:14 times
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=412
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Comment 1 to 2 of 2
Page: 1

Tuopeek   [Aug 29, 2024 at 08:37 PM]
These are unusual but a bit over engineered. I have a red one but would have been nice to have the set for a pixel. Smile The current draw for a compete display must have been quite high with all the cathode heaters and HV power supplies. The electron gun assembles in these tubes is almost identical to a complete gun as used in old black and white TV CRTs
Max   [Aug 31, 2024 at 10:21 AM]
I agree, it's a bit overkill. I think they could have gone for a much simpler VFD design involving three electrodes only.

As for the full set of those ИЛД3 tubes, the blue one can be seen in operation there and the two other colors are displayed below:




Comment 1 to 2 of 2
Page: 1