"NOT MUCH TO SEE IN THERE?" Funai (Philips) and Panasonic have been one of the most hardest trouble shooting in the history of repair business....Mitsubishi, Sanyo, Samsung and LG are the easiest.
thanks for the videos you make for us to see they helped me a lot bought a 42'' plasma for 45 euro and fixed it with the help from your video's it works like a charm again subbed from now on for sure
I have a 50inch philips flat screen , when i try to turn it on i press the power button the blue light comes on but no picture is coming on nor sound any ideas thanks
hey watts is not everything now. my sharp xflat crt has 2 5 watt speakers and those can get loud now. also the caps i replaced in hp monitor are capXon. guessing those are a bad brand.
I have a 32" Philips LCD Television I purchased sometime ago which worked fine until a big storm hit my area and lighting hit the flat screen on the wall. I have not been able to turn on the unit. I think its a power supply issue? Could you help me out Maxx...
I bought the panel for $80. It was tested as working. The HDTV that will be repaired was given to me so, basically, I'm buying an HDTV for about $140. (price of panel plus S&H as well as replacement remote).
As luck would have it, there's an eBay seller offering a complete used panel assembly for under $100 for the same model. The panel assembly was taken from a set that was supposedly diagnosed with a faulty main board.
The panel I've got has scratches on the front of the screen in addition to the bad backlight tubes so I'd be killing two birds with one stone this way. At least mine has a good main board, power supply and T-CON.
Checked it out and the only thing unique about the tubes are that they have electrical terminations welded, not soldered, on the ends to permit their mounting onto sockets.
Three tubes are bad and it appears they failed not due to wear but because of physical damage; the affected tubes have pieces of glass broken off one of their ends.
Also have a 32" Sharp Aquos LCD HDTV which had a couple of bad CCFL tubes. Unfortunately, you can't order the individual tubes; you must order a new screen assembly and that costs more than the set is worth.
Usually Diode D680 is probably shorted or other diodes.
ReplyDelete"NOT MUCH TO SEE IN THERE?" Funai (Philips) and Panasonic have been one of the most hardest trouble shooting in the history of repair business....Mitsubishi, Sanyo, Samsung and LG are the easiest.
ReplyDeleteAt 3:25 package from mouser electronics.
ReplyDelete/F7 = Funai Corp.
ReplyDeletei had 2 samwha caps go bad in my teac ag-10d amplifier
ReplyDeletei have a philips tv model 32pfl3504d/ f7 and it goes on but after 3 seconds it turns off can u give me an idea what can be the problems
ReplyDeleteAwesome repair!
ReplyDeletethanks for the videos you make for us to see they helped me a lot
ReplyDeletebought a 42'' plasma for 45 euro and fixed it with the help from your video's
it works like a charm again
subbed from now on for sure
cool dude
ReplyDeleteI got the flux capacitor done now i just need a delorean
ReplyDeleteWith an ohm meter.
ReplyDelete@maxxarcade how do you work out if the PCB has a short?
ReplyDeleteI have a 50inch philips flat screen , when i try to turn it on i press the power button the blue light comes on but no picture is coming on nor sound any ideas thanks
ReplyDeletehey watts is not everything now. my sharp xflat crt has 2 5 watt speakers and those can get loud now. also the caps i replaced in hp monitor are capXon. guessing those are a bad brand.
ReplyDeleteI have a 32" Philips LCD Television I purchased sometime ago which worked fine until a big storm hit my area and lighting hit the flat screen on the wall. I have not been able to turn on the unit. I think its a power supply issue? Could you help me out Maxx...
ReplyDeletehow much you charge for that fix?
ReplyDeleteAwesome, gotta love cheap high-end stuff :-)
ReplyDeleteThe repair turned out great. Got a decent HDTV for a fraction of what it would have cost used.
ReplyDeleteMe, too. Fixing stuff can be pretty fun, especially if it gains you something at a lower cost.
ReplyDeleteFor reference: the model number of the Sharp is an LC-32SB24U.
Cool, hope it turns out good :-)
ReplyDeleteI bought the panel for $80. It was tested as working. The HDTV that will be repaired was given to me so, basically, I'm buying an HDTV for about $140. (price of panel plus S&H as well as replacement remote).
ReplyDeleteAs luck would have it, there's an eBay seller offering a complete used panel assembly for under $100 for the same model. The panel assembly was taken from a set that was supposedly diagnosed with a faulty main board.
ReplyDeleteThe panel I've got has scratches on the front of the screen in addition to the bad backlight tubes so I'd be killing two birds with one stone this way. At least mine has a good main board, power supply and T-CON.
Asking questions about it and awaiting answers.
Checked it out and the only thing unique about the tubes are that they have electrical terminations welded, not soldered, on the ends to permit their mounting onto sockets.
ReplyDeleteThree tubes are bad and it appears they failed not due to wear but because of physical damage; the affected tubes have pieces of glass broken off one of their ends.
Are they unique tubes? I've never had much trouble finding them at parts places or on Ebay. You usually just need to know the length.
ReplyDeleteAlso have a 32" Sharp Aquos LCD HDTV which had a couple of bad CCFL tubes. Unfortunately, you can't order the individual tubes; you must order a new screen assembly and that costs more than the set is worth.
ReplyDelete