<>15kV on the final anode and a normal sort of beam current.
<>Quite simply, under those conditions you will not get hard X-rays.
Mid 80s thing, X-rays from CDTs... the sky was falling. most passed on
Xrays but bombed seriously on RFI (electromagnetic noise) and ergonomics.
<But for Tony and others, the radiation component for monitors measures:
< magnetic fields
most old tubes were poor at this. Test with AM radio nearby.
< visible light bands
This was more the quality of the display.
< ultra-violet thru x-ray bands
They was the pregnant lady getting too much x-rays stuff.
<Part of the equation comes from the circuitry and the accellerating
<potential on the electrons, and part is the phosphor composition (which
<converts the kinetic energy of electrons into other wavelengths of course)
<I've got a handbook on this somewhere but I think it is also on-line on th
<US FCC site or the Dept of Commerce.
US was nothing like TUV and the other european standards for being
unusually harsh.
Allison