My Samsung ln32a550 worked fine until recently. We were watching a program and the screen suddenly went to a cryptic varying shades of greens in a grid with a bit of a squelching sound. After a few seconds, the unit powered off. Since this happened, we have been unable to get the unit to power back on. Upon plugging the unit in, the blue light on the front of the unit at the base comes on and the small red LED starts slowly blinking. No start up tune. Pressing any button on the remote causes the red LED to remain constant while the button is pushed, but returns to blinking immediately after.
Based on the many discussions of bad capacitors, I took a look at the power board. None of the capacitors appeared bulged, but I planned to replace them anyway. As I was searching for the correct parts online, I noticed that Samsung has a class action lawsuit settlement that provides for a free in-home service call for a technician to replace the capacitors and/or the entire power board if the capacitors alone don't fix the problem. The repair tech came out and didn't even bother with the capacitors, but instead just replaced the entire power board. Unfortunately, the problem continues and I'm still unable to use the TV.
The technician said he was 95% confident that the problem is with the main board, but I hate to drop $100+ on a replacement board without knowing that it is the problem. The same tech was initially 95% certain the problem was with the power board.
Any advise? I'm far from an electronics guru, but do my own auto repairs, appliance repairs, scuba gear servicing, etc., so I'm not afraid to dig in in order to learn how something works.
Many thanks in advance for any assistance you guys can provide.
Based on the many discussions of bad capacitors, I took a look at the power board. None of the capacitors appeared bulged, but I planned to replace them anyway. As I was searching for the correct parts online, I noticed that Samsung has a class action lawsuit settlement that provides for a free in-home service call for a technician to replace the capacitors and/or the entire power board if the capacitors alone don't fix the problem. The repair tech came out and didn't even bother with the capacitors, but instead just replaced the entire power board. Unfortunately, the problem continues and I'm still unable to use the TV.
The technician said he was 95% confident that the problem is with the main board, but I hate to drop $100+ on a replacement board without knowing that it is the problem. The same tech was initially 95% certain the problem was with the power board.
Any advise? I'm far from an electronics guru, but do my own auto repairs, appliance repairs, scuba gear servicing, etc., so I'm not afraid to dig in in order to learn how something works.
Many thanks in advance for any assistance you guys can provide.
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