Hi all,
I'm becoming crazy trying to fix the Philips TV of my old man (model 43PUS6201/12 - the TV, not my dad). I've read again and again discussions about this and similar TV models, on badcaps (thanks so much !). I see no other option than asking for your help.
The symptom is simple : when I plug the power cord, the red "stand-by" LED does not light on anymore, and the TV powers-on neither with the remote control nor with the rear button. I guess at this point you immediately think at the 5V (or other voltage depending on the hardware) stand-by output...
So, I disconnect the suspicious PSU from the rest of the system, I feed the board with 220V AC and measure DC outputs on CN9101. Notice here that I DON'T shortcut the 3.5/5V standby output with PS_ON in the first place, neither with a wire nor a 1K resistor. Therefore I'm expecting to see only this standby voltage and none of the 12V. Curiously I see the exact opposite behavior :
- 12 volts on 12VA/16VA
- 12 volts on 12V/16V
- 0 volt on +3.5/+5V
Well, I guess I must have misunderstood something. Anyway, measuring 0 volts on an output that should obviously deliver 3.5, 3.7 or 5 volts (*) leads me to think that the PSU is faulty.
(*) : This detail is documented on page 34 of the Chassis service manual kindly provided by elektrotanya.com. I feel the doc is a bit unclear which behavior to expect with each of PSU variants 715G7350, 715G6973 and 715G6887. Not important actually.
Then I chase leaking caps, smoked ICs and all, nothing obvious. Finally I play it humble and buy a replacement board at AliExpress (sorry...). But... I see the exact same behavior oin the new board (looking like a worked-on piece). I ask for refund, buy another one, same thing again. At this point I think that the main board might be damaged and shortcut this standby output voltage, and each time kill the PSU on first power-on. So, I should test output voltages before connecting it to the main board. I ask for refund again and buy a PSU. This time I test it carefullly. And... Same behavior again !
I see only two possibilities :
- I'm dumb and I've misunderstood something around how these outputs are supposed to behave
- my karma is aweful, I probably was a serial killer in a previous life or something. And all these PSU I receive have a similar issue with this 3.5/5V.
Then I've also measured voltages with PSU and mainboard connected :
- I read a quite stable 0.8 volts on 3.5/5V
- and a stable 0.56 volts on PS_ON
- of course, 12V and 12VA outputs stay at 12 volts
Not sure whether these measurements are meaningful, though.
Thank you for reading, helping, advising and chiding
Hervé
I'm becoming crazy trying to fix the Philips TV of my old man (model 43PUS6201/12 - the TV, not my dad). I've read again and again discussions about this and similar TV models, on badcaps (thanks so much !). I see no other option than asking for your help.
The symptom is simple : when I plug the power cord, the red "stand-by" LED does not light on anymore, and the TV powers-on neither with the remote control nor with the rear button. I guess at this point you immediately think at the 5V (or other voltage depending on the hardware) stand-by output...
So, I disconnect the suspicious PSU from the rest of the system, I feed the board with 220V AC and measure DC outputs on CN9101. Notice here that I DON'T shortcut the 3.5/5V standby output with PS_ON in the first place, neither with a wire nor a 1K resistor. Therefore I'm expecting to see only this standby voltage and none of the 12V. Curiously I see the exact opposite behavior :
- 12 volts on 12VA/16VA
- 12 volts on 12V/16V
- 0 volt on +3.5/+5V
Well, I guess I must have misunderstood something. Anyway, measuring 0 volts on an output that should obviously deliver 3.5, 3.7 or 5 volts (*) leads me to think that the PSU is faulty.
(*) : This detail is documented on page 34 of the Chassis service manual kindly provided by elektrotanya.com. I feel the doc is a bit unclear which behavior to expect with each of PSU variants 715G7350, 715G6973 and 715G6887. Not important actually.
Then I chase leaking caps, smoked ICs and all, nothing obvious. Finally I play it humble and buy a replacement board at AliExpress (sorry...). But... I see the exact same behavior oin the new board (looking like a worked-on piece). I ask for refund, buy another one, same thing again. At this point I think that the main board might be damaged and shortcut this standby output voltage, and each time kill the PSU on first power-on. So, I should test output voltages before connecting it to the main board. I ask for refund again and buy a PSU. This time I test it carefullly. And... Same behavior again !
I see only two possibilities :
- I'm dumb and I've misunderstood something around how these outputs are supposed to behave
- my karma is aweful, I probably was a serial killer in a previous life or something. And all these PSU I receive have a similar issue with this 3.5/5V.
Then I've also measured voltages with PSU and mainboard connected :
- I read a quite stable 0.8 volts on 3.5/5V
- and a stable 0.56 volts on PS_ON
- of course, 12V and 12VA outputs stay at 12 volts
Not sure whether these measurements are meaningful, though.
Thank you for reading, helping, advising and chiding

Hervé
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