Very interesting! That article says he heated a 6mm thick acrylic sheet with a hot air gun and then laid it over the glass CRT (apparently to reshape the sheet into the form factor of the CRT) and later he trimmed off the excess.
I tried this for a 16" Macintosh Color Display and I got scratches / rub marks on the acrylic from the screen during forming. I ended up building a jig to bend the 5mm thick acrylic I was using. This was to put a 15" LCD panel inside the 16" Macintosh Color Display housing.
This reminds me. I need to open this monitor up at some point and replace the 15" Samsung LCD inside. It's acting up. I was going to replace it with one of my 15" NEC 52V LCD panels (1024x768 resolution). I've been driving this monitor with a SuperMac accelerated video card for a super crisp 1024x768 output.
The only issue with doing this LCD with acrylic in front hack is if you have OCD like me, it's super annoying putting things together without getting dust between the acrylic and the LCD panel. I don't have a clean room so it was clean, install, deinstall, clean, install, deinstall, until I finally got it as dust free as possible (after like a dozen attempts). Painful. No, doing it in a shower stall with hot water mist didn't help / wasn't easy. I have a home made laminar flow hood but not big enough for this monitor.
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