Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Thank for this information
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Collapse
This is a sticky topic.
X
X
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
thanks for sharing.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Very useful thread, thank you for sharing...
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
You should make a thread regarding to your monitor, this thread is for the guide only, not for any particular model.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
SAMSUNG P2270HD
2 Second to black
other parts are O.K. ie. CCFL.
this power board kills my life...
everthings seems O.K.
i.e. caps. i test them on board.
any idea?
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Originally posted by stevwills View Postthe both lamps don't turn completely on. they kinda turn on like a loading screen. (they both go at the same pace.) and before they hit the end, the monitor turns off.
when is say the monitor turns off, i mean only the panel. the speakers and the power led stayes on.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Hello, i have an asus vh242h that does a ''2 seconds to black'' I have completely dissassemble the monitor. from what i can see, when i turn the monitor on, the both lamps don't turn completely on. they kinda turn on like a loading screen. (they both go at the same pace.) and before they hit the end, the monitor turns off. I have a feeling its the power board. because of the symptoms its giving me. but i am definitely not an electrician. and i was wondering if someone with more tech savy then i do can confirm my theory.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
thanks a lot for the guide!
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Quick question.
I have the 11P06 MOSFET (i hope it's a mosfet) and when connecting the red to the Drain and black to the Source I get 511 (diode mode) and a guy on Youtube says there shouldn't be.
Is it faulty?
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Thank you helped alot im still learning helped me tremendously
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
You should create a new thread for the question you have regarding to the monitor repair, this thread is for the guide on how to.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Thank you for this amazing tutorial!
In my case (RPC LCD - junk with PSU Mirage PI-170DTLA) it was one CCFL lamp; I tested with one took from a Samsung LCD and voila, evrika... no more 2 seconds to black!!! Of course I changed all caps and IC202 and IC203.
So, check the CCFL lamps! It's complicated to disassembly.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Excellent tips, could save a lot of money and time.
Originally posted by retiredcaps View Post<snip>
5) Bad CCFL
--------------
Pay ATTENTION as there is a VERY HIGH VOLTAGE (600V to 1000V)! No multimeter is required for this test.
The CCFLs light up the panel and they can be bad due to age, bad solder, bad wiring connection or a variety of reasons. The easiest way to test for bad CCFLs is to have a least one other good CCFL. If you see a pinkish/redish hue, this is a sign that your CCFLs are dying.
Let's assume that you have a LCD with 4 CCFLs (numbered 1 to 4) and a good spare. We are trying to narrow down which CCFL is bad by substituting in a good one.
Pay ATTENTION as there is a VERY HIGH VOLTAGE (600V to 1000V)! As a safety precaution, it might help to have someone around when you are doing this if something screws up.
a) TURN POWER OFF and unplug the monitor and wait 1 minute
b) disconnect CCFL #1 and plug in spare CCFL into spot #1
c) plug in monitor and turn monitor on - note if "2 seconds to black" occurs
d) TURN POWER OFF and unplug the monitor and wait 1 minute
e) reconnect CCFL #1 and disconnect CCFL #2 and plug in spare CCFL into spot #2
f) plug in monitor and turn monitor on - note if "2 seconds to black" occurs
g) TURN POWER OFF and unplug the monitor and wait 1 minute
h) reconnect CCFL #2 and disconnect CCFL #3 and plug in spare CCFL into spot #3
i) plug in monitor and turn monitor on - note if "2 seconds to black" occurs
j) TURN POWER OFF and unplug the monitor and wait 1 minute
k) reconnect CCFL #3 and disconnect CCFL #4 and plug in spare CCFL into spot #4
l) plug in monitor and turn monitor on - note if "2 seconds to black" occurs
If you have a bad CCFL, one of the tests above should show you which one. If you still have "2 seconds to black", then we can assume it is not due to a bad CCFL.
This test, however, can isolate which, and how many CCFLs have gone bad as with the working lamp plugged in the picture would still be visible (for a short period) but quite dim. However, when the bad lamp is plugged in there would be no picture at all in that 2 (or less) seconds.
There's another interesting thing described in this thread, where a digital MM or even a capacitor connected at right place acts as confusing element for feedback protection circuitry and the picture will stay on even with 3 working lamps, hence no black picture symptom. This can sometimes be useful as the repair can be uneconomical. And after all, replacing the lamps is a tricky as one can score a perfect "hat trick" only to completely mess on the 4th attempt (usually on friend's panel ).
My point is, running LCD with 3 or even 2 lamps can still sometimes be acceptable until all of them die, but this requires finding a way to confuse protection mechanism by attaching something that the feedback sees as a good lamp.
Question is: what is the best and safest way to do it?
BTW: the "remains" of the monitor can then be used to build pretty good standalone CCFL tester.
Cheers.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Thank you very much retiredcaps sir.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
woww. amazing post.
I'm thrill the way your explanation goes here.
l will will keep this in mind.
thanks alot retiredcap
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Hello to you all. I hope that you can guide or direct me here. I have a 40 inch TCL LCD tv and am getting the 2 seconds to black issue. so far I have replaced the inverter board and gotten no change but my specific issue is that when I power it on, vertically I get half the screen to light up on the right and nothing on the left side then goes to standby and audio still works. I am baffled because when I first tested this issue the screen lit up very dim on the left and nothing on the right. after taking the tv apart and removing the original inverter board to look at the lamps, I reassembled the tv and upon initial power on after that it was the same problem but it had moved from the right being black to the left during the 2 seconds to black condition. Please help. Thanks all
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Very good info here! Thank you to all involved. Im hoping to get my display back up and running but will have to start a thread as it is very unusual, at least to me.
Leave a comment:
-
Re: A guide on how to troubleshoot 2 seconds to black
Thank you retiredcaps! You and the other members are very kind to share all of this information.
Leave a comment:
Leave a comment: