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How To: Make A CRT TV Into an Oscilloscope

How To: Make A CRT TV Into an Oscilloscope
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This is the simplest possible way to make a CRT (cathode ray tube) TV into an oscilloscope, it can be done in about half an hour.

Supplies
-A CRT TV (color may work, but I'm not sure)
-Some wire
-A soldering gun
-Rubber gripped pliers (for safety)
-A screw driver
 
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Step 1Identify Wires

Identify Wires
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After undoing all screws remove the cover from the TV.
Inside wrapped around the CRT are two coils of wire, one controls the vertical deflection of electrons, the other controls the horizontal deflection.
Find where these coils of wire attach to the circuit board, and desolder one coil.
Place the cover back on the TV(for safety) and plug in and turn on the TV.
If you see a horizontal line, you desoldered the vertical deflection coil.
If you see a vertical line, you desoldered the horizontal deflection coil.
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73 comments
1-40 of 73next »
Mar 5, 2012. 7:12 AMmysterion says:
....tried this, turned on my tv it immediatly shorted out and turned off, reconnected the horizontal coil it worked.......tried it once more boom, some small capacitors started blowing :(
Jun 18, 2011. 7:45 PMReallunacy says:
Is there a way to know what the max input for voltage is? I am needing an oscilloscope so that I can properly set the gains on my amp. I want to be sure it isn't clipping, but I want to be certain I am not going to just fry the unit once I do this.
Dec 15, 2011. 8:33 AMrainman002 says:
You might have trouble actually seeing the wave shape, as this does not do any sort of triggering or synchronization to keeps the waves in the same spot on the screen. To overcome that, you'd need to tune your amp-input to a frequency multiple of the scanning frequency of the screen (probably by trial and error).

In addition, the high inductance of the coils may affect the output from the amp. Maybe a voltage follower of sorts would help, but I'm not really sure.
Aug 30, 2011. 7:54 AMamit dwivedi says:
please give more elaboated idea of making cro from black and white tv and also elaborate about making dual trace cro from the same.give an account as soon as possible.
Aug 27, 2011. 5:43 AMebuzztone says:
On color TVs, is it possible to use the RGB colors to add color to the lines, so that for example the incoming sound determines the color of the waveforms? An idea would be to make an automatic switching circuits that switches between RGB combinations. Would that work?
Jun 14, 2011. 3:07 PMR.A.T.M says:
i need help i did what it said to do then i pluged the tv in and herd screeming like a cap charging then when i turend it on a loud pop happend now all the tv dose is scream
Jun 16, 2011. 5:16 PMR.A.T.M says:
iv found out what happen i dont know howit happen i blew a transister the one that drives the fly back it wont let me post a pictur but right dow the middle and it wass preaty vilent
Mar 30, 2011. 11:15 PMapp0 says:
Hello, nice instructable!
But I want to make a multi-mode oscilloscope out of my old TV, so I can use it as a usual oscilloscope and as an X-Y oscilloscope.
How do i do that?
Mar 22, 2011. 8:35 PMJimmy Proton says:
A speaker is just a coil of wire but that never broke anything...
Mar 14, 2011. 12:54 AMhATEmATH says:
it's great to turn the knobs to VoltDIV and timeDIV :)
Dec 28, 2010. 7:46 AMbears0 says:
how can i tell polarity or does it not matter
Nov 26, 2010. 4:41 PMOra says:
I was taking apart the eyepiece for an old Sony Handycam the other day and I was shocked to discover that it had a tiny CRT in it. I immediately knew I needed to make a tiny oscilloscope out of it. Here's the result:
Dec 28, 2010. 7:19 AMbears0 says:
can you make an instructable please, i have one too and would like to know how you did it.
Dec 28, 2010. 9:19 AMOra says:
I just followed this instructable. It's the same principle, you just have to identify the vertical and horizontal coils of the CRT, and for mine I used a wall wart to supply power just to the eye piece so I didn't need the rest of the camera to power it.
Dec 27, 2010. 11:04 PMCameronSS says:
That's quite brilliant, really. Modern cameras all have LCD viewfinders, but there are countless old camcorders out there with CRT viewfinders. There's a giant one sitting on my workbench right now -- I'm quite tempted to hack into it now.
Sep 18, 2010. 11:25 AMmanoch_dc says:
I Operation and Vertical lose.
Aug 25, 2010. 2:44 PMhighvoltage says:
I build one from a 1992 color TV and it works great! Only took a couple minutes, easiest and most satisfying build I've done in some time! :D
Aug 4, 2010. 6:24 AMbobcat504 says:
i have a sylvania television i tryed to connect one coil to my stero and i kept the outher coil atteched to the main board i turn it on it has one little spot that lights up when my music plays it does nothing
Jul 30, 2010. 6:38 AMbobcat504 says:
how can you turn a portable small black and white televison into a oscilloscope
Jul 30, 2010. 7:42 AMbobcat504 says:
nice i made my black and white poritable television in to an oscilloscope i had to connect the white and the gray wire in to a coil it works
Jun 29, 2010. 12:03 PMbwandice says:
This looks awsome, and I have been trying to get my '82 color tv to do this, but I think it might be too new to work. I have figured out which wires coming from the coil assembly are the vertical and which are horizontal. When I cut a vertical wire I saw a nice bright horizontal line, and vice-versa, so this made me think it would be able to work with this particular tv. So after cutting all the wires from motherboard to coil and after soldering the Horizontal wires from coil to where the vertical wires were on the main circuit board, I turn on the tv and there is neither a vertical or horizontal line at all! the Tv is just blank. Wat do?
Feb 9, 2010. 11:52 PMjerkey says:
the vertical of a TV set is 60 Hz (in the USA).  The horizontal is 15,750 Hz.  If you cut the wires for the vertical, you will get a Horizontal line moving across 15,750 times per second.  Music will not be visible because it is lower than this frequency.  If you cut the wires for the Horizontal, you will get either a vertical line or the TV will stop lighting up.

This is because the Horizontal coil is part of the circuit of the high-voltage power supply.  Some TVs will work with the Horizontal coil cut.  Some will not.  If your TV wont work, try connecting a different coil to the wires to keep the mainboard happy.  An easy win is to use the coil from another TV or monitor and zip-tie it off to the side.

If you get it working, you now have a vertical line which repeats 60 times per second.  You can loosen the metal clamp on the coils and rotate the assembly 90 degrees (turn it to the right, viewed from the back).  Now you have a Horizontal line.  You can feed signals into the old Horizontal coil, but they have to be amplified first - powerful enough to drive a speaker.

You can use an amplifier like a guitar amp.  If you only need to boost a headphone-like signal, you can use the amp built into the TV set.  Disconnect the built-in speaker and connect the Horizontal coil instead.  Find the wires to the volume knob - one of them is "from" the TV tuner.  Unhook that wire and connect it (and ground) to a connector on the outside of the TV.  Note:  sometimes "ground" is HOT and can shock the hell out of you.  Check first.  If it is, use a 1:1 transformer from Radio Shack between the knob and the connector.
Jun 8, 2010. 3:07 PMincapacitor says:
I've got the tv to read it's own static by hooking up the speaker wires to the vert coil, but cannot figure out where to insert the music input wiring, presumably into the tv amp somehow. unfortunately, attaching wiring to the volume knob ground and the tv tuner yielded only a straight line [on the display]. what am I doing wrong?
Jun 27, 2010. 8:18 PMjerkey says:
first, put the speaker back on so that you can hear what you're doing (unless you want to do this by watching the screen). There are three terminals on a potentiometer, such as a volume knob. More complicated volume knobs exist in stereo equipment, car stereos especially, but assuming your TV has a regular three-legged volume knob, here goes. One terminal will be connected to ground (it's not the middle one). The middle one goes to the audio amplifier and we'll leave it alone. The third terminal (opposite the ground one) is the signal coming from the TV tuner. The third terminal is the one you want. When you disconnect that wire from the knob, you will get a flatline (silence) instead of static. Now, connect an audio cable or connector to the potentiometer where it was formerly connected to the TV tuner signal. It must be at least loud enough to drive a pair of headphones. Now your signal is going into the volume knob - when you turn up the volume knob, it allows your signal to go to the amplifier. I hope this works!
May 9, 2010. 3:45 AMedwianni1 says:
Can this be done with a small portable 5" tv?
May 9, 2010. 5:43 PMedwianni1 says:
Thank you.
Apr 18, 2010. 3:04 PMTobyBrock! says:
I'm relatively certain I have it all hooked up correctly, but when I wire a power source to it, nothing happens. About how strong does the source need to be?
1-40 of 73next »

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