redux2redux
New member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2014
- Messages
- 4
Buy a new TV from a place that will deliver and take the old one away.
The front of that Trinitron tube is something like 2" thick leaded crystal, but at the back, it's surprisingly thin.


This and a fire extinguisher.
This is a 6mm plastic bb mini gun.

Just leave it up there and glue a new flat panel TV onto the front of it.
Hell yeah, dawg...That's trailer park-101.
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It was an interesting video, but the comment about the capacitors is BS. They discharge relatively quickly after the TV is unplugged. The danger is in the CRT anode itself. It works in a similar fashion to a capacitor and can hold a charge for a reasonably long time. A retired friend who was a real, come to the house TV repairman, explained the danger to me many years ago when he worked on an old TV that we got free with the house.
That video gave also me a headache. Maybe they can redo it in an even lower resolution?
Tommy
Framing and drywall was a joke.
I'd just lean an extension ladder to it at as shallow an angle as possible.
Climb the ladder and pull the TV towards me onto the ladder and slide it down.
Since its a old tv why not take it apart and haul it down in pieces
Y'all seriously underestimate the heaviness and awkward bulk that is a Sony Trinitron.
We used a genie lift whenever we could.
Alex.

Y'all seriously underestimate the heaviness and awkward bulk that is a sony trinitron.
I remember thinking that when I moved it from it from the truck, unpacked it. Carried it to the bedroom and put it in the cabinet.I remember thinking that when I moved it from it from the truck, unpacked it. Carried it to the bedroom and put it in the cabinet.
I'm not a big guy and was younger then (5'8" 160lbs and 45 years old).
Still I managed to get it done.
I can see 2 guys. No way I could imagine 5-7 guys carrying a TV.
Had a sony like that once, never again...
A lift is the safe way to do it. They rent pretty cheap. I think somebody covered that a few pages back.
I still maintain the best way is to protect the wall and floor and yank it off while recording it for our entertainment.
No matter what I bet the edge of the shelf it's on is going to get damaged so you might as well make it worth our while. Just don't be under the damn thing.
Stuntmen jumping off buildings land safely on stacked empty cardboard boxes. A stuntman weighs about the same as this TV.
So just stack up empty cardboard boxes to the level of the TV, and push/pull it off the shelf.
This was my thought as well.
The boxes crushing will slow the fall of the TV
