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Example of a trilon.

A trilon is a three-faceted prism-shaped object.

A trilon can be made to rotate on an axle to show different text or images which may be applied to any of its three facets. Trilons have been used on game shows and billboards.

The game board on the original Concentration may have been the first use of trilons on a game show. The game combined the card game with a rebus puzzle. The original game board consisted of 30 motorized trilons. One facet of each trilon had an identifying number. A description of a prize or other game element was on a second facet, and a portion of a rebus was on the third facet. The rebus was gradually revealed as the game progressed. Puzzle pieces were kept under high security and were attached to the trilons only as needed.[1]

Trilons became a common element on many other game (and reality) shows including:

Mechanically speaking, trilons had a penchant for being temperamental, labor-intensive, and very noisy. They were largely replaced by on-set television monitors, as on Jeopardy! (starting with the 1984 revival, although pull-cards were used instead of trilons until 1991). They were replaced by a CGI game board on the 1987 "Classic" revival of Concentration and Family Feud (starting with the 1999 revival).[3]

Trilons have been used in roadside billboards and variable-message signs. Particularly in billboards, many long, thin trilons are placed side-by-side in the frame and periodically rotate simultaneously to cycle the billboard through three separate signs, although many have been replaced by dot-matrix signs capable of displaying a much wider range of messages.

References

  1. ^ David P. Johnson. "Concentration ... through the decades". Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  2. ^ "Video of a Debt episode from its first season". Archived from the original on 2014-06-10. Retrieved 2009-09-17.
  3. ^ James Vipond. "Concentration: How the board worked". Retrieved 2008-03-22.