I haven't found any information on this display so let me be the first. This one also suffers from the bad cap syndrome. Capxons. Symptoms mine exhibited were flashing on for a second and then turning off. Initially I was able to get it to stay on by repeatedly pushing the on button until it stayed on however after time this no longer worked.
Dis assembly is simple. Remove two screws attaching the base and the three screws along the bottom on the back. Separate the front and back covers. They snap together. I used a box cutter (old style) with the blade removed to push in on the inner lip while pulling out and away on the back cover. Disconnect the 4 connections from the inverter and the one wire and ribbon connector from the video board. Remove the screws securing the inverter board and remove the wire harness from the video board.
The offending caps were 2. 25v 820uf and 1. 25V 330uf. I didn't note their location but they were all close together and in a row. There are also 2 25V 680uf Capxons you might want to replace while you're in there. This is really very simple and quick 20 mins from start to finish.
Cheers
Dis assembly is simple. Remove two screws attaching the base and the three screws along the bottom on the back. Separate the front and back covers. They snap together. I used a box cutter (old style) with the blade removed to push in on the inner lip while pulling out and away on the back cover. Disconnect the 4 connections from the inverter and the one wire and ribbon connector from the video board. Remove the screws securing the inverter board and remove the wire harness from the video board.
The offending caps were 2. 25v 820uf and 1. 25V 330uf. I didn't note their location but they were all close together and in a row. There are also 2 25V 680uf Capxons you might want to replace while you're in there. This is really very simple and quick 20 mins from start to finish.
Cheers
Comment