...and before I get too much flack. maybe it is possible to restore emission in a crt, but what a crapshoot. sometimes they kill the crt instantly, sometimes they restore the brightness temporarily, and occasionally it seemed to fix it long term. maybe some guys know the magic incantation. but a lot of the time the guy would keep saying "look how much better it is" until he convinced ya' maybe it really was better.
Not at all a crapshoot; they do exactly as they claim. Boils away the top layer of the cathode so it emits better again, and you can see real, actual difference right there in the emission current. I've had a few that couldn't be helped but never ever had one that the thing killed; the only time that's really likely is when doing a "Remove Short" operation, and if you're at that stage, the tube is junk already with at least one dead gun. Grid-cathode shorts are a common occurrence; that IS a permanent repair unless the short was caused by a dingle who gets in there and fiddles with the SCREEN knob to make things brighter as soon as the tech leaves.
The real crapshoot is for the tech; they might have to eat a trip charge if the customer is a dickwad who calls you out to do a rejuve because their regular tech has told them they've done it once or twice already and it's time for a new CRT. Whenever I had a customer specifically ASK for a rejuve, I made it explicitly clear that they would be paying my trip charge whether or not I was successful. That tended to eliminate the abusers.
Only problem is it's not a permanent fix; it's just a last-ditch to get a little more life out of a worn-out CRT. How much better and how much life depends entirely on the CRT vs usage cycle; I made it VERY clear to the EU that it REALLY IS just THAT, and I never ever had a single complaint that it didn't last long enough. I used to get $65 a pop brightening CRTs for the local video game halls; had some go another 2 years before taking the final dump. Made a big difference paying my way through school the first time around; and guess who they called for the big ticket when a game needed a new one...
No, it's real science. There is some art to the process in that the machine CAN be made to do MORE than it's intended to by an experienced operator who knows how hard you can push a particular tube before it kakks, but pretty much anybody who reads and follows the instructions can gain a lot of useful life on pretty much any CRT that doesn't have an irreparable short or has been rejuved a couple times already.
mnem
*Nuke Life*