Re: VIZIO VO42L No picture, No Sound
My latest project is a Vizio VO42LFHDTV10A 42" television. The person I got the TV from said the screen went black but the audio still worked. My first test was the old flashlight into the screen test. I was able to see the image, so I know the problem has something to do with the backlights.
After opening the TV I was surprised by how simple everything looked. I mean I've seen monitors half the size of this TV that have more boards and cables in them. In the middle is the power board, below that is the main video board, and on the left and right are the two inverter boards (sorry I didn't get an overall picture of the TV layout).
From the power board to the inverter boards is a single bundle of wires. According to the silk-screening on the power board the wires were ground, standby, power (either 12V or 24V, I forget which), and 'A' and 'B'. My guess is 'A' and 'B' carry voltage to tell the inverter boards to turn on. First I probed all the wires with the TV in standby. All pins read 0 except 4.9V on the standby lines - so that's as expected. Next I probed the pins with power on. Still 4.9 on the standby, either 12 or 24 on the power lines (again, I forget which), and 'A' and 'B' have 5V and 3.3V. So the voltages coming from the power board appear to be good.
Next I removed the inverter boards for a closer look. When viewing the monitor from the rear, the master board is on the left and the slave board is on the right. The surface mount fuses are good, and the ESR on the caps checks out. Also, the resistance between the different windings of the inverters is consistent, so I'm guessing the inverters are fine. As posted by Dgtech here I checked the mosfets and driver IC. All 4 mosfets on the master board check out. But one of the 4 mosfets on the slave board has a very low reading. So either the mosfet is bad, or the driver IC. Looking more closely at the driver IC I can see the problem. There is a small brown spot and very slight bulge on top of the chip right at pin 26. What's more, pin 26 is gone. I'm guessing the chip literally blew creating the brown spot and ejected the pin from the IC. I've included a close up picture of the bad chip.
So by now I'm convinced the problem that driver IC (BD9897FS). I ended up ordering a new one from the only place I could fine it... eBay. It cost $5.90 including shipping from a distributor in China. The chip arrived in less than 1 week from China (much quicker than I was expecting).
Now the matter of desoldering the old and soldering in the new. I have never done any SMD work, but I do have a nice solder station (Hakko 936) with a small tip. I decided to use ChipQuik SMD Removal Solder as demo'ed in this video. That ChipQuik stuff works great! The chip was off in about 10 seconds. After that a little solder wick the clean up the pads and I was ready to solder in the new chip.
As it turns out, soldering in the replacement was a lot trickier than I was expecting. It took a while to get the chip properly aligned. While soldering I created 2 solder bridges which took a while to clear using solder wick. Once I was finally done I took two close up pictures (see below) of the chip to verify my soldering. By no means a professional job, but considering this is my first ever attempt at SMD soldering I felt it went pretty good. Also, I took a picture of the old chip on top of a dime to give you some perspective of the size.
After all the soldering I put the board back in and the TV works like a charm. I'm going to run the TV for a while to make sure the repair holds, but it looks like for $5.90 in repair parts I have a 42" TV.
Many thanks to the members of this forum. All the knowledge I've gained reading your posts made this possible. And a special thanks to Dgtech for his post!
My latest project is a Vizio VO42LFHDTV10A 42" television. The person I got the TV from said the screen went black but the audio still worked. My first test was the old flashlight into the screen test. I was able to see the image, so I know the problem has something to do with the backlights.
After opening the TV I was surprised by how simple everything looked. I mean I've seen monitors half the size of this TV that have more boards and cables in them. In the middle is the power board, below that is the main video board, and on the left and right are the two inverter boards (sorry I didn't get an overall picture of the TV layout).
From the power board to the inverter boards is a single bundle of wires. According to the silk-screening on the power board the wires were ground, standby, power (either 12V or 24V, I forget which), and 'A' and 'B'. My guess is 'A' and 'B' carry voltage to tell the inverter boards to turn on. First I probed all the wires with the TV in standby. All pins read 0 except 4.9V on the standby lines - so that's as expected. Next I probed the pins with power on. Still 4.9 on the standby, either 12 or 24 on the power lines (again, I forget which), and 'A' and 'B' have 5V and 3.3V. So the voltages coming from the power board appear to be good.
Next I removed the inverter boards for a closer look. When viewing the monitor from the rear, the master board is on the left and the slave board is on the right. The surface mount fuses are good, and the ESR on the caps checks out. Also, the resistance between the different windings of the inverters is consistent, so I'm guessing the inverters are fine. As posted by Dgtech here I checked the mosfets and driver IC. All 4 mosfets on the master board check out. But one of the 4 mosfets on the slave board has a very low reading. So either the mosfet is bad, or the driver IC. Looking more closely at the driver IC I can see the problem. There is a small brown spot and very slight bulge on top of the chip right at pin 26. What's more, pin 26 is gone. I'm guessing the chip literally blew creating the brown spot and ejected the pin from the IC. I've included a close up picture of the bad chip.
So by now I'm convinced the problem that driver IC (BD9897FS). I ended up ordering a new one from the only place I could fine it... eBay. It cost $5.90 including shipping from a distributor in China. The chip arrived in less than 1 week from China (much quicker than I was expecting).
Now the matter of desoldering the old and soldering in the new. I have never done any SMD work, but I do have a nice solder station (Hakko 936) with a small tip. I decided to use ChipQuik SMD Removal Solder as demo'ed in this video. That ChipQuik stuff works great! The chip was off in about 10 seconds. After that a little solder wick the clean up the pads and I was ready to solder in the new chip.
As it turns out, soldering in the replacement was a lot trickier than I was expecting. It took a while to get the chip properly aligned. While soldering I created 2 solder bridges which took a while to clear using solder wick. Once I was finally done I took two close up pictures (see below) of the chip to verify my soldering. By no means a professional job, but considering this is my first ever attempt at SMD soldering I felt it went pretty good. Also, I took a picture of the old chip on top of a dime to give you some perspective of the size.
After all the soldering I put the board back in and the TV works like a charm. I'm going to run the TV for a while to make sure the repair holds, but it looks like for $5.90 in repair parts I have a 42" TV.
Many thanks to the members of this forum. All the knowledge I've gained reading your posts made this possible. And a special thanks to Dgtech for his post!
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