Re: Gateway FPD2185W
NCC (Nippon Chemicon) is the same as United Chemicon. If they are one of the series listed in the following link, then you should be fine:
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=2280
Gateway FPD2185W
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Okay, so I recapped my board with Panasonic FC caps, and used Panasonic EE for the big filter caps. No change, except it displays a picture for maybe 1 second longer depending on how temperamental it's feeling.
Here is the bottom of the board showing the transistors:
And here are the multimeter measurements of said transistors. They were measured with the 20k range:
Code:Pin - 1-2 | 1-3 | 2-3 --------------------- U301 OL 4.79k OL U302 OL OL OL U304 OL 4.79k OL U305 OL OL OL
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
I found a kit of capacitors for the FPD2185W that has the capacitors for the power and logic board for under $13, including shipping. The capacitors are all NCC except one is Rubycon. The capacitors I put into the monitor from Radio Shack are Xircon. Are NCC capacitors ok?Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Radio Shack does not sell low-esr caps, which is what you need to perform a proper repair. Suggest you first try recapping with something like Panasonic FM, FR or FC caps. Use digikey.com, choose USPS first class shipping for lowest cost shipping.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Back when I did the repair, the website I read about it gave the Radio Shack part number. I did not pay attention to the brand, to tell the truth. Back then there seemed to be a lot less information on my monitor than there is now.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Hi,
I am not an electronics person, but am fairly handy, I replaced 8 capacitors on my Gateway Fpd2185w a few years ago. It died suddenly while using it yesterday. From what I have read here it seems I have the 2 seconds to black problem. I don't have access to any ccfls that I could test the bulbs with. I was wondering if I take the monitor apart so I can see the lamps, would I be able to visually tell if a bulb was bad by turning the monitor on and watching them? Each time I turn the monitor on, the Gateway logo comes up, then the screen goes blank. Shortly after that the power light goes to orange unless I have the computer connect to it running, in which case the power light stays blue.
I do have a few multitesters laying around. Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Ok, I will take the monitor apart, I have not pulled the Lcd apart before, but I am used to pulling things apart and putting them back together, including laptops that I have replaced parts inside to get them up and running again. I am just a bit clueless when it comes to testing a piece on a board, I don't know what can be tested in circuit, or has to be pulled. I will look for the burnt wires/dark ends on the tubes. I can buy a ccfl to use to test with, but was hoping that if I could turn it on while being able to observe the tubes, I might see that one did not light properly, before it shuts off.
Retiredcaps, I have been reading the posts you suggested and will also try and do some testing, thanks.
ThanksLast edited by baysailor; 12-08-2011, 08:06 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
You would need to take the monitor apart and then probably disassemble the lcd panel to expose the ccfl's (exception is that sometimes the ccfl's "slide" out from the lcd panel). This can be difficult if it's your first time. Make sure you have plenty of space to lay out each part of the panel. You need to be able to remember the order and orientation of each part when re-assembling. The most common issue that I have seen with ccfl's is the wires connected to the ends sometimes "burn" off and need to be re-soldered. If the ends of the ccfl's are dark, they may be nearing or at the end of their life. Ccfl's can also be cracked.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
2 seconds to black can be
a) bad caps
b) bad ccfls and/or wiring
c) bad inverter transformer
All the above (and more) discussed starting with posts #13 and #14 at
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=10419
Also note the misc suggestion #1 on how to attach your pictures.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Hi,
I am not an electronics person, but am fairly handy, I replaced 8 capacitors on my Gateway Fpd2185w a few years ago. It died suddenly while using it yesterday. From what I have read here it seems I have the 2 seconds to black problem. I don't have access to any ccfls that I could test the bulbs with. I was wondering if I take the monitor apart so I can see the lamps, would I be able to visually tell if a bulb was bad by turning the monitor on and watching them? Each time I turn the monitor on, the Gateway logo comes up, then the screen goes blank. Shortly after that the power light goes to orange unless I have the computer connect to it running, in which case the power light stays blue.
I do have a few multitesters laying around. Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you.Leave a comment:
-
Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Hi,
I am not an electronics person, but am fairly handy, I replaced 8 capacitors on my Gateway Fpd2185w a few years ago. It died suddenly while using it yesterday. From what I have read here it seems I have the 2 seconds to black problem. I don't have access to any ccfls that I could test the bulbs with. I was wondering if I take the monitor apart so I can see the lamps, would I be able to visually tell if a bulb was bad by turning the monitor on and watching them? Each time I turn the monitor on, the Gateway logo comes up, then the screen goes blank. Shortly after that the power light goes to orange unless I have the computer connect to it running, in which case the power light stays blue.
I do have a few multitesters laying around. Any help would be appreciated.
Thank you.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
I would still suspect a problem with one of the CCFLs wiring inside the panel.
Take a picture of the CCFL pig tails, so you remember the wiring original positions.
And then remove the wiring and terminals from the plastic housings. Then position the known good bulbs and wiring into the connectors that fit into the monitor you're trying to diagnose.
If you don't know how to remove the wiring from the plastic connectors, post a picture of them and I will talk you through it.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
An update and a question.
I parked this monitor for a while and went back to it last night. I'd pulled a set of fluorescents off another display that were good (but the LCD was cracked) to use for testing. To remind myself of the exact problem I powered up the FPD2185W.
- I could hear some distinct but faint sizzling sounds coming from the bottom edge of the LCD panel.
-The monitor would power up for approximately 8 seconds before the backlights turned off.
The spare backlights I'd pulled all had 2-pin connectors, and I realized that one set of lights for the top and bottom edges of the LCD had 5-pin connectors. I knew I couldn't test them all, but just as a what-the-hell gesture I unplugged the single bottom-edge 2-pin connector from the main PC board (as you look at the board with the LCD connectors on the right, this would be the bottom-most connector) and plugged one of the test lights in its place. I then powered up the monitor again.
Interesting find: the external light stayed on for about 8 seconds before going off with the others, but the sizzling sound moved from the light(s) inside the LCD's bottom edge to the external light. I could place my ear to the bottom of the panel and hear no noise; when I held the external light to my ear I heard the sizzling sound. I tested this with the other three spare lights, all with the same results.
So would it be safe to say that the problem in this case wouldn't be with the backlights themselves but is still with the inverter board?Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
An update and a question.
I parked this monitor for a while and went back to it last night. I'd pulled a set of fluorescents off another display that were good (but the LCD was cracked) to use for testing. To remind myself of the exact problem I powered up the FPD2185W.
- I could hear some distinct but faint sizzling sounds coming from the bottom edge of the LCD panel.
-The monitor would power up for approximately 8 seconds before the backlights turned off.
The spare backlights I'd pulled all had 2-pin connectors, and I realized that one set of lights for the top and bottom edges of the LCD had 5-pin connectors. I knew I couldn't test them all, but just as a what-the-hell gesture I unplugged the single bottom-edge 2-pin connector from the main PC board (as you look at the board with the LCD connectors on the right, this would be the bottom-most connector) and plugged one of the test lights in its place. I then powered up the monitor again.
Interesting find: the external light stayed on for about 8 seconds before going off with the others, but the sizzling sound moved from the light(s) inside the LCD's bottom edge to the external light. I could place my ear to the bottom of the panel and hear no noise; when I held the external light to my ear I heard the sizzling sound. I tested this with the other three spare lights, all with the same results.
So would it be safe to say that the problem in this case wouldn't be with the backlights themselves but is still with the inverter board?Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
I should add that those lines are reminiscent of what you'd see if some columns in the panel were bad. I'm not convinced that's the problem, though.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
I just picked one of these up and thought it might be an easy fix, thanks to the great info in this forum. I replaced all the electrolytics with the preferred DigiKey Panasonic units, and although the MOSFETs looked okay with no board discoloration I replaced those as well.
I still got the faint 'sizzling' sounds and the 'several seconds to black.' I reopened the monitor and decided to reflow the connections. I've never seen so many crappy solder joints on a board! The big thing I noticed was that, after sucking some of the bad connections clean and resoldering with a good 60/40 solder, the joints would still cool too quickly and look cold. Weird. I had to rework some of the bigger connections and heat them for a much longer time to get halfway-good looking connections. I have an adjustable-heat electronic-type iron, and I tried lower settings (longer to heat) and higher settings (faster heating but faster cooling as well) with no real difference.
After this, I still get the blackout problem but it takes 6-8 seconds. Also, I see a number of thin, vertical lines on the display when its displaying a PC image on the DVI input (before it blacks out, that is). I haven't yet tried the other inputs. I'd try to take a picture but I think the display would blank out before I could get everything set.
I'm hoping the actual panel isn't shot; when its first powered on and I get the Gateway logo I don't see those lines. Could this be, perhaps, bad joints on the input/output board?
BTW, I will reopen the thing again and reflow more joints on the inverter/PS board. I also plan to open the panel to check the lamps, but I'm not looking forward to that task...Last edited by TheHarbinger; 09-06-2011, 06:58 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Yeah, I'm just figuring that out now; I've been doing motherboards for awhile now, and on so many laptops where the screen doesn't work its a bad connection to the bulb - so I'd gotten used to looking for that. Recently I started doing LCD monitors and Flat-Panel TV's (funny how people will pay more to fix their TV then their computer isn't it?) and haven't really done enough homework on the basic circuit theory. I was referring to a pair of Acer monitor schematics when I noticed the 5 to 1 thing.
Do you have, or can you point me to some basic reference schema for the protection side of it? I understand how the pwm chip feeds switching fets into transformer, just a little fuzzy on the sensing of over voltage and over current. I have attached one of the schema's I'm working with, do most multiple tube backlights implement the over voltage with a string of transistors like this one (Q502-Q505) - looks like all 4 co-operate to hold Q501 off right? And when Q501 turns on by the pull up resistor it trips the protection?
PlainBillLeave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Yeah, I'm just figuring that out now; I've been doing motherboards for awhile now, and on so many laptops where the screen doesn't work its a bad connection to the bulb - so I'd gotten used to looking for that. Recently I started doing LCD monitors and Flat-Panel TV's (funny how people will pay more to fix their TV then their computer isn't it?) and haven't really done enough homework on the basic circuit theory. I was referring to a pair of Acer monitor schematics when I noticed the 5 to 1 thing.
Do you have, or can you point me to some basic reference schema for the protection side of it? I understand how the pwm chip feeds switching fets into transformer, just a little fuzzy on the sensing of over voltage and over current. I have attached one of the schema's I'm working with, do most multiple tube backlights implement the over voltage with a string of transistors like this one (Q502-Q505) - looks like all 4 co-operate to hold Q501 off right? And when Q501 turns on by the pull up resistor it trips the protection?
OVP is simple. R501 and R502 form a resistive voltage divider. The positive peaks are transferred to OVP1 by D508 pins 3 and 2. C527 and C530 form a capacitive voltage divider. D507 pins 3 and 2 transfer the positive peaks. And of course the same circuit is present for the other pair of CCFLs. C507 is charged to the level of the highest peak; if it goes too high the inverter controller is shut down.
Current sense is handled similarly. I've never been able to get my head around this over current protection scheme. This design is quite rare.
PlainBillLeave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
The classic inverter design senses the current through all the lamps and uses that to set the output level. A separate circuit monitors current through individual lamps. This design uses the current through one CCFL to set the current for all six.
PlainBill
Do you have, or can you point me to some basic reference schema for the protection side of it? I understand how the pwm chip feeds switching fets into transformer, just a little fuzzy on the sensing of over voltage and over current. I have attached one of the schema's I'm working with, do most multiple tube backlights implement the over voltage with a string of transistors like this one (Q502-Q505) - looks like all 4 co-operate to hold Q501 off right? And when Q501 turns on by the pull up resistor it trips the protection?
Leave a comment:
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Re: Gateway FPD2185W
Ah HAH!!! If you still can't get rid of the flicker (mine came back) here's some info and a possible fix for it... Worked for me anyway.
There are six lamps. One side of each lamp connects to a bigger transformer. The other side connects to a smaller transformer, which appears to be only for sensing (although I could be wrong). The circuit is in two halves, 3 lamps on each big transformer. However the protection sensing circuit is not split evenly - if you follow the traces you find that the first lamp (board traces/bottom up, ccfl connectors to the right) is by itself, and the other 5 connect together (follow traces between small transformers).
How does this help?
I swapped the returns so that the second bulb (small black wire) feeds the single lamp sensing circuit and the first one (small yellow) feeds the five piece circuit. Turns out the first bulb was pretty worn, and was making the protection trip.
Now its perfectly stable!!!! Yay, so happy....
The classic inverter design senses the current through all the lamps and uses that to set the output level. A separate circuit monitors current through individual lamps. This design uses the current through one CCFL to set the current for all six.
PlainBillLeave a comment:
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