I just picked up a Vizio p42hdtv10a, the tv will power on and play near perfectly for about 10 minutes, the only imperfection is a couple of nearly unnoticeable randomly scattered red pixels that move around in real time. After 10 minutes or so the tv will start having more issues, the screen will start flickering on and off very frequently, and eventually there will be so many pixels you can hardly see anything on the screen. Once it gets to that point it takes approximately 2 minutes until the tv powers itself down.
After it powers itself down, if you try turn the tv back on it will only stay on for 30 seconds or so and power back down.
One thing I noticed about it was that while the screen is flickering you can hear a slight kind of stuttering sound coming from the power supply, like it is taking alot of extra stress and cant keep up (imagine a car running out of gas, and sputtering trying to get those last few fumes.)
I've opened the tv up and took a quick visual inspection of all the capacitors, i did not notice any that were bulging, that is not to say that none of them are bad though.
I have a multimeter and I would be able to test some things, I have done circuit board soldering a few times before, but this tv has me stumped as where to look next.
My experience with circuit boards is honestly not very good, but I am also pretty persistent and don't normally give up to easily so if I could get guided in the right direction im sure I could get this fixed.
After it powers itself down, if you try turn the tv back on it will only stay on for 30 seconds or so and power back down.
One thing I noticed about it was that while the screen is flickering you can hear a slight kind of stuttering sound coming from the power supply, like it is taking alot of extra stress and cant keep up (imagine a car running out of gas, and sputtering trying to get those last few fumes.)
I've opened the tv up and took a quick visual inspection of all the capacitors, i did not notice any that were bulging, that is not to say that none of them are bad though.
I have a multimeter and I would be able to test some things, I have done circuit board soldering a few times before, but this tv has me stumped as where to look next.
My experience with circuit boards is honestly not very good, but I am also pretty persistent and don't normally give up to easily so if I could get guided in the right direction im sure I could get this fixed.
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