Hello!
I have this LG 42PC1RV Plasma (display type 42V8) that went bad a few days ago. The TV turns on and the sound is working fine but there is no picture on the display. Checked the SCART out and the video signal output is there, channels change, volume control works etc so i'm guessing the main board is OK.
I took it apart and found that all the fuses for the Ysus and Zsus boards are ok and so are all the voltages from the power supply.
I checked Va, Vs, Vsc and Vzb and they are all fine, showing very close or exactly the same voltages as labeled on the panel. The only one that is wrong is -Vy. The Y-sus board emits a strange buzz/hiss every second or so and the -Vy voltage goes from 0 or -1 to -2.8V in sync with the buzzing. This also happens when the YDRV board is disconnected. I checked the YDRV input lines and there are no shorts. I think the YDRV board is ok.
The Va and Vs voltages jump up a few volts when the Y-sus board is disconnected. Is this normal?
Could this be an IPM related issue? I can't find a schematic for this Y-SUS board and i have no idea where the -Vy supply is generated from and where it goes to (the PCB is multi-layered and i can't trace the connections properly). The IPM looks somewhat different from what i've seen in other people's threads as the parts under it are not exposed. I didn't desloder it so i couldn't see what's written on it (if anything).
I looked carefully and could not see any sign of blown components or leaked/vented capacitors on any board.
After being on for about 2-3 minutes the IPM, MOSFETs on the YSUS and ICs on the YDRV board get warm. I can't find anything excessively hot.
The boards are in this TV are:
YSUS Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QYH005B;
YDRV Model 42V8, part no. 6870QKE010A;
ZSUS Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QZH004B;
X-L Model 42V8, part no. 6870QME015A;
X-R Model 42V8, part no. 6870QSE017A;
CTRL Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QCH0C6C;
and PSU Sanken 1H328W, part no. 6709900023A.
This is my first plasma screen repair so any help is much appreciated.
Thanks,
Andy.
I have this LG 42PC1RV Plasma (display type 42V8) that went bad a few days ago. The TV turns on and the sound is working fine but there is no picture on the display. Checked the SCART out and the video signal output is there, channels change, volume control works etc so i'm guessing the main board is OK.
I took it apart and found that all the fuses for the Ysus and Zsus boards are ok and so are all the voltages from the power supply.
I checked Va, Vs, Vsc and Vzb and they are all fine, showing very close or exactly the same voltages as labeled on the panel. The only one that is wrong is -Vy. The Y-sus board emits a strange buzz/hiss every second or so and the -Vy voltage goes from 0 or -1 to -2.8V in sync with the buzzing. This also happens when the YDRV board is disconnected. I checked the YDRV input lines and there are no shorts. I think the YDRV board is ok.
The Va and Vs voltages jump up a few volts when the Y-sus board is disconnected. Is this normal?
Could this be an IPM related issue? I can't find a schematic for this Y-SUS board and i have no idea where the -Vy supply is generated from and where it goes to (the PCB is multi-layered and i can't trace the connections properly). The IPM looks somewhat different from what i've seen in other people's threads as the parts under it are not exposed. I didn't desloder it so i couldn't see what's written on it (if anything).
I looked carefully and could not see any sign of blown components or leaked/vented capacitors on any board.
After being on for about 2-3 minutes the IPM, MOSFETs on the YSUS and ICs on the YDRV board get warm. I can't find anything excessively hot.
The boards are in this TV are:
YSUS Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QYH005B;
YDRV Model 42V8, part no. 6870QKE010A;
ZSUS Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QZH004B;
X-L Model 42V8, part no. 6870QME015A;
X-R Model 42V8, part no. 6870QSE017A;
CTRL Model 42V8&X3, part no. 6870QCH0C6C;
and PSU Sanken 1H328W, part no. 6709900023A.
This is my first plasma screen repair so any help is much appreciated.

Thanks,
Andy.
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