I had this nice 42 inch 1080p Panasonic plasma working in my bedroom for 5 months (it was the one with the cold joint on the power board.)
I decided 42 inch plasma is way too big for me so I got a 32 inch 1080p Sharp Aquos cheap for fixing up and sold this one, but a day later it came back with the original fault (talk about bad luck!) So I gave the guy his money back...
I've since traced it down to the AC detect board, which tells the PSU if the AC is present. I've found that when I freeze spray it, the TV will power up and work fine. Once it warms up, it only powers up intermittently.
I believe it's one of the ceramic caps on the AC detect board, but I can't be sure because the only schematic I have of it is the one I've reverse engineered (see below.)
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...8&d=1367795705
I drew the PNP Q3 backwards in that by mistake. The emitter faces BIAS-9V and the collector is the output. C3 is the suspect. It's the biggest cap on the board by far, and it appears to be the only one where if it failed leaky, it would cause Q3 to stay off. It would have to fail very leaky (probably shorted.) But I cannot know it's value unless anyone else can measure it.
If I can't fix this part, I may have to think of an alternative AC detect circuit design... ideas coming soon.
I decided 42 inch plasma is way too big for me so I got a 32 inch 1080p Sharp Aquos cheap for fixing up and sold this one, but a day later it came back with the original fault (talk about bad luck!) So I gave the guy his money back...
I've since traced it down to the AC detect board, which tells the PSU if the AC is present. I've found that when I freeze spray it, the TV will power up and work fine. Once it warms up, it only powers up intermittently.
I believe it's one of the ceramic caps on the AC detect board, but I can't be sure because the only schematic I have of it is the one I've reverse engineered (see below.)
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...8&d=1367795705
I drew the PNP Q3 backwards in that by mistake. The emitter faces BIAS-9V and the collector is the output. C3 is the suspect. It's the biggest cap on the board by far, and it appears to be the only one where if it failed leaky, it would cause Q3 to stay off. It would have to fail very leaky (probably shorted.) But I cannot know it's value unless anyone else can measure it.
If I can't fix this part, I may have to think of an alternative AC detect circuit design... ideas coming soon.
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