As you know from some of my recent posts, my venue has been completely Barco-ized.
Since, for better or worse, I probably spend more time around my equipment than with
my family or friends, I feel should know as much as possible about it, and I've recently
discovered a few things I never knew about BARCO.
For example, I learned BARCO is an acronym for "Belgian-American Radio Company",
and they've been around since the early 1930's, and began, not surprisingly, making
radios, everything from cheap tabletop models, to expensive consoles. Most of them
had MW and SW bands, as was common in radios for the European market.
A BARCO Radio From The Late 1930's (Note Logo On The Speaker Grille)
BarcoRadio_1.jpg
In the late 1940's, they branched out into television. When I worked in professional TV
production and editing for several years, I recall we had several rack mounted professional
BARCO color-critical monitors that were used for QC and air-checking.
An early BARCO Television (appx 1949)
BARCO_TV-Orig.jpg
My favorite BARCO product would have to be this combination coin operated radio
and juke box from the 1950's, that they called the "BARC-O-MATIC"
BarcoMatic_1.jpg
I'm really tempted to 3-D print several of these logos and stick them on our BARCO projectors!
BarcoMatic_2.jpg
Lucien DePuydt-
The Founder Of Barco
BARCOLucienDePuydt.jpg
> photo credit: various internet sources
Since, for better or worse, I probably spend more time around my equipment than with
my family or friends, I feel should know as much as possible about it, and I've recently
discovered a few things I never knew about BARCO.
For example, I learned BARCO is an acronym for "Belgian-American Radio Company",
and they've been around since the early 1930's, and began, not surprisingly, making
radios, everything from cheap tabletop models, to expensive consoles. Most of them
had MW and SW bands, as was common in radios for the European market.
A BARCO Radio From The Late 1930's (Note Logo On The Speaker Grille)
BarcoRadio_1.jpg
In the late 1940's, they branched out into television. When I worked in professional TV
production and editing for several years, I recall we had several rack mounted professional
BARCO color-critical monitors that were used for QC and air-checking.
An early BARCO Television (appx 1949)
BARCO_TV-Orig.jpg
My favorite BARCO product would have to be this combination coin operated radio
and juke box from the 1950's, that they called the "BARC-O-MATIC"
BarcoMatic_1.jpg
I'm really tempted to 3-D print several of these logos and stick them on our BARCO projectors!
BarcoMatic_2.jpg
Lucien DePuydt-
The Founder Of Barco
BARCOLucienDePuydt.jpg
> photo credit: various internet sources
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