This was a freebie from a member here, Thanks David!!!
My first reaction was indifference. It had a very unusual display problem (see attachments (I zipped the video)) which I tentatively felt was either tcon or panel, and the built in DVD player did not seem to be working, so I set it aside. When I checked the price of a tcon I discovered it would cost less than $20, so there was a potential profit to be made.
Before ordering a tcon, I examined the display again and realized it looked like it was missing sync signals. That would be the main board, and unreasonably expensive for a 23" TV. Then looking at the service manual I realized the DVI input went directly to the gm5221 chip. Hooking it up to a computer showed the same problem!!!
That reduced the possibilities - A bad gm5221 or a bad regulator. Power for the gm5221 comes from a pair of dedicated regulators 3.3 and 1.8 volts. The 3.3 read 3.31 volts, but the 1.8 read 1.76, slightly low. At this point I pulled out the scope and looked at the power supply lines. The 3.3 volt line was clean, but the 1.8 volt line had over 1V p-p of noise riding on it. The output of the 1.8 volt regulator was filtered by a pair of 47uF, 16V caps, so as a final step I tried hooking a 100uF, 25V cap in parallel with them. When I powered up the set I was happy to see a clean 1.8V rail, and a stable 'No Signal display on the screen. I pulled the original SMT caps and replaced them with a pair of 47uF low ESR caps and the TV is working perfectly.
The DVD problem turned out to be a combination of problems - the DVD player is disabled if it is not the selected input - and the DVD I was using for testing (E.T. - The Extraterrestial) was rejected by the player, while it found 'Knowing' perfectly acceptable.
PlainBill
My first reaction was indifference. It had a very unusual display problem (see attachments (I zipped the video)) which I tentatively felt was either tcon or panel, and the built in DVD player did not seem to be working, so I set it aside. When I checked the price of a tcon I discovered it would cost less than $20, so there was a potential profit to be made.
Before ordering a tcon, I examined the display again and realized it looked like it was missing sync signals. That would be the main board, and unreasonably expensive for a 23" TV. Then looking at the service manual I realized the DVI input went directly to the gm5221 chip. Hooking it up to a computer showed the same problem!!!
That reduced the possibilities - A bad gm5221 or a bad regulator. Power for the gm5221 comes from a pair of dedicated regulators 3.3 and 1.8 volts. The 3.3 read 3.31 volts, but the 1.8 read 1.76, slightly low. At this point I pulled out the scope and looked at the power supply lines. The 3.3 volt line was clean, but the 1.8 volt line had over 1V p-p of noise riding on it. The output of the 1.8 volt regulator was filtered by a pair of 47uF, 16V caps, so as a final step I tried hooking a 100uF, 25V cap in parallel with them. When I powered up the set I was happy to see a clean 1.8V rail, and a stable 'No Signal display on the screen. I pulled the original SMT caps and replaced them with a pair of 47uF low ESR caps and the TV is working perfectly.
The DVD problem turned out to be a combination of problems - the DVD player is disabled if it is not the selected input - and the DVD I was using for testing (E.T. - The Extraterrestial) was rejected by the player, while it found 'Knowing' perfectly acceptable.
PlainBill
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