From the other thread I own an older Sharp Aquos LCD TV that's missing the control box. I instead used it as a 720p DVI monitor for a media center system in my room and thought I would also try to hack an audio in port to it so I could use the internal amp and speakers.

With the control unit missing the amp output is fixed so it's perfect for me to control the volume from the PC and not from the TV. I rerouted the audio in from CONNECTOR 2 to the external speaker out jacks. The modifications are seen below.


It worked with one glitch. If you had turned the TV on and off a few times you would not get audio out of the speakers. The only way to fix it was to unplug the TV for about 30 seconds.
Then two days ago my inverter had a fit again and when it was rapidly turning the set on and off I lost the audio. If I crank the volume all the way up on the computer I can faintly hear it through the speakers. During troubleshooting I found that if I funneled the audio in directly to pin 10 or 13 on IC3803 I would get audio back. Same applied if I went directly to 10 or 11 on IC3812, however with severe clipping.
The catch was that it would do so in mono only and if one of the internal speakers were unplugged both speakers would go totally silent.
I'm not sure what exactly shorted out here but it would be cool to get it fixed instead of replacing it all with some small amp.

With the control unit missing the amp output is fixed so it's perfect for me to control the volume from the PC and not from the TV. I rerouted the audio in from CONNECTOR 2 to the external speaker out jacks. The modifications are seen below.


It worked with one glitch. If you had turned the TV on and off a few times you would not get audio out of the speakers. The only way to fix it was to unplug the TV for about 30 seconds.
Then two days ago my inverter had a fit again and when it was rapidly turning the set on and off I lost the audio. If I crank the volume all the way up on the computer I can faintly hear it through the speakers. During troubleshooting I found that if I funneled the audio in directly to pin 10 or 13 on IC3803 I would get audio back. Same applied if I went directly to 10 or 11 on IC3812, however with severe clipping.
The catch was that it would do so in mono only and if one of the internal speakers were unplugged both speakers would go totally silent.
I'm not sure what exactly shorted out here but it would be cool to get it fixed instead of replacing it all with some small amp.
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