I have been given for repair a 15" LCD monitor which has no backlight. When you turn it on you get nothing but a very faint image. So most likely, the inverter or the CCFLs are dead.
I found a blown fuse on the inverter board. I removed the tiny 1206 SMD fuse and replaced it - temporarily - with a solder bridge. Now the monitor lights up for about 1 second then shuts down. So I know the CCFLs are probably good right? Question is, why is the inverter shutting down after 1 second? Could a bad CCFL be shutting it down? The inverter shutting down also turns off the LCD display. (Before, with the blown fuse, you could at least faintly see the display.)
When lit up, the display is the normal, expected brightness and is a good, pure white. No yellow or pink.
I tried to test the CCFLs as so. I unplugged one and then noted the result:
Both plugged in: switches off in <1 second
Top only: switches off in <1 second
Bottom only: nothing (never comes on)
Seems somewhat inconclusive.
I found the inverter part for just $10 + $4 shipping so I will probably buy it if further troubleshooting proves tricky, but I don't want to waste money on an inverter when the CCFLs could be bad.
Any idea what the problem might be?
Thanks,
Tom
I found a blown fuse on the inverter board. I removed the tiny 1206 SMD fuse and replaced it - temporarily - with a solder bridge. Now the monitor lights up for about 1 second then shuts down. So I know the CCFLs are probably good right? Question is, why is the inverter shutting down after 1 second? Could a bad CCFL be shutting it down? The inverter shutting down also turns off the LCD display. (Before, with the blown fuse, you could at least faintly see the display.)
When lit up, the display is the normal, expected brightness and is a good, pure white. No yellow or pink.
I tried to test the CCFLs as so. I unplugged one and then noted the result:
Both plugged in: switches off in <1 second
Top only: switches off in <1 second
Bottom only: nothing (never comes on)
Seems somewhat inconclusive.
I found the inverter part for just $10 + $4 shipping so I will probably buy it if further troubleshooting proves tricky, but I don't want to waste money on an inverter when the CCFLs could be bad.
Any idea what the problem might be?
Thanks,
Tom
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