Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
Collapse
X
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
That 3.3v is sent from the display board TO the power supply, towards the inverter.
As it is right now, my guess is the two pins at the top are the ADJUST and ON/OFF pins. The monitor may have the brightness set to maximum or the processor only adjusts the brightness after it "boots up" so initially you see 3.3v on that pin.
Either way, that automatic inverter will survive for a short time if you somehow mix up the on/off pin and the adjust pins, it will just run the lamps at maximum brightness. And if you adjust the brightness at something very low and the wires are inverted, the inverter may turn off (then you know they're mixed up)
Attach two wires to those two pins, tie them to on/off and adjust on your inverter... get that 14v pin and connect it with a wire to input voltage on your inverter, ground to ground, and attach the lamps to the new inverter and see what happens.Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
That 3.3v is sent from the display board TO the power supply, towards the inverter.
As it is right now, my guess is the two pins at the top are the ADJUST and ON/OFF pins. The monitor may have the brightness set to maximum or the processor only adjusts the brightness after it "boots up" so initially you see 3.3v on that pin.
Either way, that automatic inverter will survive for a short time if you somehow mix up the on/off pin and the adjust pins, it will just run the lamps at maximum brightness. And if you adjust the brightness at something very low and the wires are inverted, the inverter may turn off (then you know they're mixed up)
Attach two wires to those two pins, tie them to on/off and adjust on your inverter... get that 14v pin and connect it with a wire to input voltage on your inverter, ground to ground, and attach the lamps to the new inverter and see what happens.
When you say attached the lamps I gather it's the screens plugs?
Also where does the external +12 volt supply input go to the new inverter and which is the earth or -12volt?
And do I need to supply and external 5 volt supply?Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
You have four wires coming from the small inverter board. Turn it on its back and you have there the text saying which wire does what.
Mine looks like this:
But the colors might be different on your inverter.
One wire will be on/off , one will be adjust ... those two wires you tie to the first two pins on the small display board.
One wire will be Vin which accepts anything above 10v, so that goes to your 12v or 14v
The GND wires goes to ground.
As you can see on my inverter, the colors don't make sense - normally black signifies ground, red signifies 5v, yellow 12v... on my inverter are exactly opposite.
Yes, if you remove the power supply board from the back, you need to create the 12v and 5v voltages for the display board through some other method. Easiest way would be to get a 12v laptop/monitor dc adapter and then use a 7805 or something compatible to get 5v.
You can feed the inverter with around 12v with no problems and you should connect 12v to the pin on the display board that acccepted 12-14v previously.
As the power supply is no longer used, not connected to the display board, you will need to create those 5v for the display board, and this is where the circuit with 7805 comes in play on the previous page.
You can use however LM317 or whatever you have, fixed version for 5v or with adjustment resistors - you said you did an adjustable supply with something like this before so it should be easy for you.Last edited by mariushm; 11-25-2012, 11:35 PM.Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
You have four wires coming from the small inverter board. Turn it on its back and you have there the text saying which wire does what.
Mine looks like this:
But the colors might be different on your inverter.
One wire will be on/off , one will be adjust ... those two wires you tie to the first two pins on the small display board.
One wire will be Vin which accepts anything above 10v, so that goes to your 12v or 14v
The GND wires goes to ground.
As you can see on my inverter, the colors don't make sense - normally black signifies ground, red signifies 5v, yellow 12v... on my inverter are exactly opposite.
Yes, if you remove the power supply board from the back, you need to create the 12v and 5v voltages for the display board through some other method. Easiest way would be to get a 12v laptop/monitor dc adapter and then use a 7805 or something compatible to get 5v.
You can feed the inverter with around 12v with no problems and you should connect 12v to the pin on the display board that acccepted 12-14v previously.
As the power supply is no longer used, not connected to the display board, you will need to create those 5v for the display board, and this is where the circuit with 7805 comes in play on the previous page.
You can use however LM317 or whatever you have, fixed version for 5v or with adjustment resistors - you said you did an adjustable supply with something like this before so it should be easy for you.
On the one I have, black is power in and red is earth. The two yellows come from adjust and on/off on the inverter.
Lucky you mentioned that as I had tied the red and black to the display board, red as power in and black earth.Red has always been positive 12 volts and black negative earth in my experience.
I will be picking up two of 7805's and two lots of caps from my city today.
When the 12 volts and 5 volts are attached they basically piggyback the 4pin plug that is supplied and also tied off to the display board from the inverter?Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
On computer power supplies, orange is 3.3v, red is usually 5v, yellow is 12v .. ground is always black.
There's usually one exception, where the connector has just two wires... then black is almost always ground, the other color is voltage... ex 2 wire fans have black ground, red is 12v
You don't need 2 x 7805, you can connect both 5v pins in that connector to one 7805. A single 7805 should be quite capable of delivering enough power to that display board.
The inverter needs ground, 12v
The display board needs ground, 12v , 5 v
So both the display board and the inverter will share 12v and 5v.
Inverter needs to receive on/off signal and adjust from the display board, so there's the two wires between inverter and display board for that.
Here's a really poorly drawn schematic... I barely passed the technical design exam at university that's how bad i suck at drawing but should still be easy to understand
In theory both of those capacitors are optional, but it's really safer to have them around.Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
On computer power supplies, orange is 3.3v, red is usually 5v, yellow is 12v .. ground is always black.
There's usually one exception, where the connector has just two wires... then black is almost always ground, the other color is voltage... ex 2 wire fans have black ground, red is 12v
You don't need 2 x 7805, you can connect both 5v pins in that connector to one 7805. A single 7805 should be quite capable of delivering enough power to that display board.
The inverter needs ground, 12v
The display board needs ground, 12v , 5 v
So both the display board and the inverter will share 12v and 5v.
Inverter needs to receive on/off signal and adjust from the display board, so there's the two wires between inverter and display board for that.
Here's a really poorly drawn schematic... I barely passed the technical design exam at university that's how bad i suck at drawing but should still be easy to understand
In theory both of those capacitors are optional, but it's really safer to have them around.
I did put together the 5volt power supply after my first attempt failed.
My soldering was atrocious and one of the joints failed making me think at first I had cooked the IC.
I really need a proper soldering iron that works.
I ended up using an old spring circuit board that's used for kit projects and the components were still working. I ended up getting an amazing 5.01volts.Comment
-
Re: Computer Monitor Conversion AC to DC
That 3.3v is sent from the display board TO the power supply, towards the inverter.
As it is right now, my guess is the two pins at the top are the ADJUST and ON/OFF pins. The monitor may have the brightness set to maximum or the processor only adjusts the brightness after it "boots up" so initially you see 3.3v on that pin.
Either way, that automatic inverter will survive for a short time if you somehow mix up the on/off pin and the adjust pins, it will just run the lamps at maximum brightness. And if you adjust the brightness at something very low and the wires are inverted, the inverter may turn off (then you know they're mixed up)
Attach two wires to those two pins, tie them to on/off and adjust on your inverter... get that 14v pin and connect it with a wire to input voltage on your inverter, ground to ground, and attach the lamps to the new inverter and see what happens.
with only the 5 volt positive supply to put in place.
In your drawing the 5v at the display board goes into which pin?
"My guess is the two pins at the top are the ADJUST and ON/OFF pins."
So would it therefore mean the 5 volts goes to pin 5 or 6 ?
My Display top row is..1= 0volts, 2=5volts, 3=grd, 4= 14volts,
bottom row... 5= -0.12volts, 6= 5 volts, 7=grd, 8= 14 voltsComment
Related Topics
Collapse
-
Hello guys! I need a little help, I have one laptop for repair, it is an Aorus 17G YD, gaming laptop. Broken display, some cable ripped form daughter board connector, case broken, battery discharged and probably locked, etc. After I did the most tedious job I ever did on soldering back the broken cables (shielded cable) , I measured resistance on CPU and GPU core, 3 and 5 v ps and any coils I find on the board, everything seems to be fine. After I plugged the charger I don't get the power led light on from the charger connection maybe because the battery is locked , but on power button I have...
-
by maralexbarI ask this question in general as there are many Acer Aspire models with UEFI Insyde BIOS that do not boot to the BIOS on an external monitor (VGA, HDMI, etc) showing only the Internal LCD (LVDS, eDP etc).
It's a pain to work on Acer notebooks with a broken screen and not being able to access the BIOS using an external monitor.
If anyone knows how to force the external monitor as primary for Notebooks of those models11-02-2024, 09:18 AM -
by momakaNormally, I never post repairs this quick after I do them, because… I am usually very slow.
But today, I’m making an exception here. Why? No idea. Perhaps only because the repair details are still “fresh” in my head… which is ironic, given this is a 16 year old monitor that hardly anyone will care about today. It is new to me, though.
I picked it up last November from someone on my local Craigslist. It wasn’t very close to where I live, but was close to a family friend that I had to go visit anyways. So after watching the posting on Craigslist for a few weeks and seeing it getting...
-
Channel: Troubleshooting Computer Displays
-
-
by gabri2211Hi to all 😎
I'm looking for any useful information to repair this interface (I have attached the image).
On this board I read E3215-1215A_4D.
This is the small plate inside the HD enclosure that allows to connect a 12 volt power supply, interface the disk with a USB 3.0 socket and is connected to the HD with the SATA connector.
If any of you have found a burnt or short-circuited component in a circuit like mine, if you have useful diagrams for the repair, or even better a description for the tests at the test points, I would be very grateful.
in particular...1 Photo-
Channel: Announcements & Related News
11-12-2024, 08:08 PM -
-
by fasda1984, Hello have same GS66 Stealth 11UE, it start only in external HDMI monitor, Internal display died without crash or something, just started in black screen, checked driver in devices and have only external display, no more internal... Any suggestion? External working fine, no problems no errors
- Loading...
- No more items.
Comment