![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:39 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:42 |
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charged-coupled device
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:43 |
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Flux Capacitor
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:45 |
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Very well done. Any idea what it’s from?
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:46 |
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Well it’s a two core CPU but I can’t tell what kind.
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:47 |
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Looks like some sort of IC. The only ones I’ve seen with windows like that are CCDs (like For Sweden suggested) and old ROMs that could be cleared for rewriting with UV light. Doesn’t look much like the later, so I’m guessing For Sweden is on the right track.
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:50 |
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I’m going to guess a large telescope, but that’s probably wrong.
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:57 |
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older broadcast video camera?
it REALLY looks like a DLP chip:
![]() 01/10/2019 at 18:58 |
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What if I said ‘Loewe’...
![]() 01/10/2019 at 19:22 |
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There’s a very good reason why it really looks like a DLP chip... :)
Another hint or two - ‘Articos’ and $8,500.00
![]() 01/10/2019 at 19:31 |
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that was some high tech shit in 2004 :)
![]() 01/10/2019 at 19:34 |
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And it only set me back $100 in 2013. Only lasted about 1.5 years before the color wheel exploded and shot glass shards all over the internals. It still worked, and I nicknamed it the ‘Back to the Future’ TV - still high-definition, but in black and white...
It was a bitch to get out of the house, weighing nearly 200 lbs. The front was one giant piece of thick glass. This DLP chip and a few lenses that I used in my lesson plans are all that remain of this once magnificent beast.
![]() 01/10/2019 at 20:43 |
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Time travel device :)