JumboTron

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ABC SuperSign, was a very large Sony JumboTron. This Sony JumboTron was later replaced with a new display capable of 720p HDTV.
ABC SuperSign, was a very large Sony JumboTron. This Sony JumboTron was later replaced with a new display capable of 720p HDTV.[1][2]
Sony Jumbotron at World's Fair 1985
Sony Jumbotron at World's Fair 1985
The TitanTron used on WWE's weekly television show, WWE Raw from May 2002 until January 14, 2008.
The TitanTron used on WWE's weekly television show, WWE Raw from May 2002 until January 14, 2008.

A JumboTron is a large-screen television technology developed by Sony, typically used in sports stadiums and concert venues to show close up shots of the event. Although JumboTron is a registered trademark owned by the Sony Corporation, the word jumbotron is often used by the public as a genericized trademark.

Manufactured by Sony, the JumboTron is recognized as one of the largest vacuum fluorescent displays ever manufactured. It is not an LED (light-emitting diode) display — each display element is composed of 3 or 6 small CRTs (cathode ray tubes), each of which is one color of a pixel.[3] Sony displayed one of the earliest versions at the Expo '85 World's Fair in Tsukuba. Sony creative director Yasuo Kuroki is credited with the development of the JumboTron. [4]

One of the largest eight-sided (octagonal) JumboTrons in the world is in Dallas, Texas, USA. The largest one for a high school in the USA is located at Lassiter High School in Marrietta, Georgia. While the JumboTron and similar large-screen displays are physically large, they are often low in display resolution. The JumboTron at Tampa Stadium in Tampa, Florida, USA, measured 30 ft (9 m) diagonally with a resolution of only 240×192 pixels. Screen size since then varies depending on the venue. The display introduced in 1985 was 40 meters wide by 25 meters tall.

The largest JumboTron in use was located at the Rogers Centre (formerly SkyDome) in Toronto, Ontario, and measured 33 ft tall by 110 ft wide (10 m tall by 33.5 m wide) at a cost of US$17 million. The Rogers Centre JumboTron was replaced in 2005 by a Daktronics ProStar as a part of a stadium revitalization project. The Western Hemisphere's largest high-definition display is a Daktronics ProStar at the University of Texas Darrell K. Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium known as Godzillatron.

[edit] Similar devices

Displays similar to the JumboTron include:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Lighting up Times Square: Opera fans honored on ABC's SuperSign this New Year's Eve. Retrieved on 2007-04-12.
  2. ^ ABC SuperSign (Adobe Flash). Retrieved on 2007-04-15.
  3. ^ Handbook of Display Technology, Joseph A. Castellano, 1992
  4. ^ Foreign Press Center Japan. Retrieved on 2007-10-10.
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