You use in 60 Watts mode when you work on piece of work that has lots of mass that will cause the temp to drop due heat sinking effect. You will develop your skill when you solder lots of works.
Set it too about 40 Watts, what happen when you set to low wattage is that you will be heating the circuit traces for a long time due to heat sinking of the solder tip and you will end up lifting the traces. You should practice on junk board and try using different setting to see what happen. It is the real hands on learning.
If you buy a soldering station it will have a temperature selection , If the part your desoldering has a lot of metal / is attached to a thick metal section of the board, youll have to turn the heat up higher then youd normally solder at. Leaded solder also melts at a much lower temp the lead-free, so when soldering you might adjust your temperature up 50 or 100 degree Celsius based on what you run into.
Fixed so far 12 lcd's , 1 plasmas, 5 monitors, 0 dlp's (plan to keep the dlps at 0). and 3 atx power supplies, and 2 motherboards.
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So are you using the old boards and you also seat all the lamp connectors, clean the burnt connector real well? If one of the lamp does not turn on or will not fire up, or not connected or stays conducting, it will also shutdown the inverter.
OK, you were looking directly at the primary side of the transformer, which when the MOSFETs that are driving the transformers are not on yet when in TV in standby mode which you should see 24V on the transformer pins, when the inverter circuits start driving transformer by pulsing the DC with real high frequency, then you will need meter that can read AC (the voltage at the transformer pins are no longer at steady, but pulsing) at very high frequency it can be as high as 80,000 Hz, which your meter can not response that fast. When the lamps flash on and do the 2-second to black, one it is black out, that 24V should be there again, unless the inverter board tells the main board to shutdown the 24V power supply.
But that blown fuse is for the PWM IC which drive the MOSFETs that drive the transformers, the white fuses are the one that supply the 24V to the primary winding of the transformer. You can verify by measuring the resistance between the white fuse and the primary side winding of the transformer. Beside you did not have the backlights on at all before replacing that black fuse. omething has to short out real bad to drop the 24V power supply, which if that is the case, the white fuses should have blown.
Just to be sure, what do you get at point 1 and point 2?
At this point the inverter is sensing something to cause it to go into shutdown.
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