Bush television receiver, type TV22, 1950.
Image number: 10251114

In the late 1940s and early 1950s, a number of large regional transmitters were built to extend the BBC's television service across the UK. As each region used a different frequency, manufacturers produced a different version of each set for each region. The Bush TV22, a 405-line television with an innovatory nine inch screen, was the first TV receiver which could be re-tuned to a different BBC transmitter should the owner move. Manufactured from 1950-1952, it was also one of the first televisions to use an aluminised cathode ray tube, ensuring that most of the light from the picture came out into the room, thus giving a brighter image. It derives its name from the location of the original Bush Radio factory in Shepherd's Bush, London.
- Image number:
- 10251114
- Credit:
- Science Museum/Science & Society Picture Library
- Date taken:
- 29 October 2003 13:05
- Image rights:
- Science Museum

