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The Soviet Union was the only other country to experiment with a field-sequential color system.
As were all color programs at the time, it was transmitted via a field-sequential color system developed by CBS.
These meetings eventually selected a competing semi-mechanical field-sequential color system being promoted by CBS.
John Baird's 1928 color television experiments had inspired Goldmark's more advanced field-sequential color system.
In advance of that, we have implemented a two-channel field-sequential color system using a two-sided tent-shaped diffusing mirror.
Commercial color television broadcasts began on CBS in 1951 with a field-sequential color system that was suspended four months later for technical and economic reasons.
According to television historian Albert Abramson, A. A. Polumordvinov invented the first field-sequential color system.
For color transmissions, a field-sequential color system was built into the lens assembly, with the conversion to NTSC done on the ground.
During the 1930s and 1940s, Field-sequential color systems were developed which used synchronized motor-driven color-filter disks at the camera's image tube and at the television receiver.
This was broadcast in the CBS field-sequential color system developed by Dr. Peter C. Goldmark.
The Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) began an experimental RGB field-sequential color system in 1940.
In these systems the three colored images were sent one after each other, in either complete frames in the "field-sequential color system", or for each line in the "line-sequential" system.
This method is similar in principle to field-sequential color system by CBS and other sequential color methods such as used in Digital Light Processing (DLP).
Unlike the winning field-sequential color system by CBS, the line sequential CTI system was all-electronic with no color scanning disk, and fully compatible with existing black and white receivers.
The World Is Yours, like other CBS color programs from 1951, was broadcast in the CBS field-sequential color system that was incompatible with existing black and white television sets, on which no picture would be visible.
A field-sequential color system is a color television system in which the primary color information is transmitted in successive images, and which relies on the human vision system to fuse the successive images into a color picture.
October 11 - A field-sequential color system developed by Hungarian American engineer Dr. Peter Goldmark becomes the first color television system to be adopted for commercial use (by CBS in the United States), but is abandoned a year later.
The CBS field-sequential color system was partly mechanical, with a disc made of red, blue, and green filters spinning inside the television camera at 1,200 rpm, and a similar disc spinning in synchronization in front of the cathode ray tube inside the receiver set.