A few comments. No intent at all to Diss PaigeOliver, just wanted to add more useful information.
> why pay $100 to retrofit a 19" TV when you can get a usable 19" arcade monitor for $50 or $60, a good one for $70-$80, and a nice recapped/rebuilt one for $100 and a new one for $200
Well, if you have in your house or find at thrift stores/rummage sales/garbage bins, you can find old 1980's 19" sets with virtually no burn in for as little as free to at most $20 at most places.. So your total cost is <$100 with new chassis and old tube. A recapped arcade monitor still may have a burned in or dulling tube and may need a tube swap eventually too. But I agree... new chassis is not for everyone, but if you're going to pull off an 25 year old chassis to put in a cap kit (a couple hours work, plus parts)...perhaps its just easier to get a new chassis outright that may not have other issues beyond needing a cap kit.
>(you really have little chance of shocking yourself on the PCB unless you start touching stuff on the underside while it is on...
Actually I wouldn't say that.. If you touch anything on the high voltage in or out side (like high voltage transistor, fuse clips, leads on resistor, resistors next to the flyback) you can definitely kill yourself. I NEVER touch anything in a monitor when it's on directly.. I always use a nylon/plastic insulated tool to do any adjustments of pots/coils or to poke/prod. You can never be sure what is sticking out.. And if you accidentially feel a small voltage, you will naturally (consiously or not) pull your hand away.. RIGHT into the sharp metal edge of the frame or right into the fragile neck of the tube.... thus secondary damage/harm to yourself.
> If you decase a TV monitor I suggest installing it where you CAN'T manage to touch anything on it without major effort.
(I know you touched on this in the next paragraph, but....) I'll extend that to say "If you decase a TV, you MUST install an isolation transformer on the power line because SOMEONE will eventually think it's just a normal monitor and go touch something grounded (or stupidly run a ground wire in the cab from the coin door or something to it) and POOF massive shock followed by numerous things blowing out ruined by the grounding. If you isolate it, then it's the same level of "safety" as an arcade one. An isolation transformer is like $12... WELL worth the investment.
> Don't pull the suction cup off the tube. And don't do ANYTHING to a TV when it is on (HOT chassis).
Technically it isn't a suction cup, just an isolation measure to keep electrons from jumping from the aquadag on the outside of the tube to the ones exposed just under the center of the anode cap that contacts electrically with the inside of the tube.
Basically, if you've never worked with CRTs (arcade monitors, TV's) you SHOULD be scared to death to work on them... That's better than thinking you can easily do whatever you want, because then you won't be scared to death, you'll just be shocked to death

However as Paigeoliver said... once you gain knowledge (by doing, an d not just reading), then it becomes increasingly easier and you can more easily do things.