I remember reading that CRT projectors use glycol/glyserol so I guess projection TV's would be similar
http://www.tv-forums.com/forum/TV_Equipment_C4/Projection_TV_Forum_F24/Changing_CRT_Coolant_P15302
http://www.mcmelectronics.com/product/20-4275
Darn, now I'm disappointed. But would have been anyway, since googling it was next.
Also, I tried a quick flammability test with some - wet a piece of tissue in it, then see if it burns. Sure does. That's unfortunate since the intended application must use an absolutely non-flammable fluid. It's something vaguely like lava lamps, only quite different. Still involving thermal convection and light, and will get hot. Lava lamps are now banned due to the fire risk, I heard. Which is fair enough.
I also tested the RPTV fluid for solubility in water, and it is completely soluble. Therefore not a silicone oil. Plus one of the old RPTVs I pulled apart had bad seals, and the fluid had badly corroded the metal frame. That's what prompted me to try the flammability and water solubility, since silicone oils don't corrode metal.
Here's another thread on this stuff:
http://www.curtpalme.com/forum/viewtopic.php?topic=21007&forum=1Incidentally, after a relaxing evening stripping components from several RPTV board sets , here's my workbench again. Yes, it's arranged for the pic. The stripped boards were in a stack on the floor, and I'd started sorting the parts then did that arrangement for the pic too. Normally I'd just put groups in small ziplock bags as I separated them. Unlike that guy recently with the thousands of containers of carefully sorted used parts, I don't fully sort these. Just dump them in ziplocks in storage cubes by type. New parts stock are kept sorted by value, used parts just by type and more or less by size/colour and 'strip sets' - since that tends to keep identical parts together.
Edit to add:
I've also found that those mirrors are quite useful for diy laser projects since the reflective film is not under the glass.
Photocopiers are an even better source of front silvered mirrors. They have long strips of quite thick precision front silvered glass in the carriage and fixed optical path.
I'm wondering the same thing about the cooling fluid, as I have about the same amount as you. I was wondering if it would be good to use as transformer oil for the odd projects. I'll try and find it off of the schematics/parts list for RPTV's and such. What are you planning to use it for?
Since discovering it's a mix of ethylene glycol, etc, and it's water soluble, I'd say definitely not good for transformers. Will absorb water, be electrically conductive, and corrode any exposed metal.
You could just buy transformer oil? (Or if you're cheap like me, find some old junk with an oil filled transformer, and use that.)