At 08:40 PM 1/24/02 +0000, you wrote:
Monitors of
the time, at least of the NTSC-compatible
type, were typically equipped with PL-259 connectors
on the rear.
Not true, at least in the video industry.
Sorry, to keep the context I should have said "...the broadcast
video industry of the Apple ][ era in North America."
By the time
consumer video equipment became popular,
the PL-259, which was also common in the '70's for other
75-ohm applications e.g. antennas and the like, had been
replaced by the 'F' types in video hookups, since those
were MUCH cheaper.
The PL-259 was in use primarily for carrying VHF and UHF
signals, not baseband video.
The PL259/SO259 was originally designed in the 1940's to carry
the then high resolution 3.5MHz 405 line baseband video signal.
Do you have a reference for this? My radio books from that era
discuss the development of this type of connector in relation to
carrying modulated voice signals.
They remained as the connector of choice, at least in
europe, until
the 70's when the more compact BNC took over. Patch pannels
were, and are still, mostly Musa as they are easy to (un)plug
even when packed closely.
At the time, the broadcast equipment I dealt with in the United States
and Canada were almost exclusively BNC, which is what our products
were designed for. I can't speak for Europe.
I've seen a lot of video gear with a lot of different connectors and I have no
doubt that video monitors of varying vintage can be found with nearly any type
of connector you can imagine. My objection was Dick's blanket assertion
regarding
BNC connectors in the video industry. During the time period in question,
BNC was
the standard for baseband and composite video and PL-259 was almost exclusively
for the carriage of RF in modern, well-funded broadcast video operations.
Cheers,
Dan