Sabre LCT47PBKA power supply MLT198G repair

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • LDSisHere
    Badcaps Veteran
    • May 2012
    • 727
    • U.S.A.

    #1

    Sabre LCT47PBKA power supply MLT198G repair

    I recently repaired a Sabre LCT47PBKA TV and thought I would share it as I could not find anything related to this TV or its' power supply on BadCaps.

    My wife recently went to visit her sister and the brother in-law sent his TV back with her in hopes that I could fix it. It was an off brand so I figured it would be a problem with the capacitors.

    I connected it to power and it showed no signs of life. I take the cover off and as expected the power supply had bloated caps. I first thought it would just be a matter of replacing the capacitors until I saw the scorch mark on the plastic insulation on attached to the back of the supply. I found two burned surface mount resistors burnt up, the four current sense resistors open, and the APFC FET shorted.

    Figuring out what the values of the surface mount resistors was the going to be the biggest challenge. I was trying to calculate what they should be based on the 1653A datasheet but I did not have much faith in the results. Then I happened to find a schematic that seemed to match this power supply. After making sure the values around the 1653A chip matched the schematic, I felt comfortable using the values listed for R27 and R18.

    I found the surface mount resistors I needed on some scrapped power supplies I keep around for just such an occasion. I found a couple of current sense resistors that would be equivalent in value to the four original ones, and a 20N60 in my parts box. I replaced the bad capacitors with ones I had on hand, then powered it up to see if it would work. The APFC chip (1653A) was not fried and the supply worked.

    I then ordered the parts I needed from Digikey to repair it properly. Before I placed my order, I looked of the rest of the TV and found the capacitors on the inverter board blown. I suspect these capacitors were what caused the power supply to work itself to the point of failure.

    After replacing all the capacitors on the inverters and power supply plus the current sense resistors and 20n60 FETs, the TV came back to life. I have ran it for 48 hours straight and it worked without any problems.

    I hope this helps someone else having problems with this same power supply / TV.
    Attached Files

Related Topics

Collapse

  • Tynan Dill
    Vizio e601i-A3 - Has Sound and Display, But No Backlight - Bad Power Supply Board or Bad LED Bulbs ?
    by Tynan Dill
    I was given this TV from my great uncle. He said it just wouldn't turn on one day out of nowhere, replaced the TV, and gave it to me to possibly fix and use for myself.

    Upon bringing it home and plugging it up, it showed a standby light.

    I powered it on and without a flashlight, the display showed the "V" but the lighting is very dim, but visible.

    The screen seems to blackout and stay black, but with a flashlight I can see the display.

    With my Playstation 4 connected via HDMI, and running a game I can hear sound.

    Assuming...
    11-22-2024, 01:46 PM
  • sam_sam_sam
    Desoldering gun station modified to use a 18 volt @ 20 amp switching power supply
    by sam_sam_sam
    I have wanting to do this project for quite sometime now and I finally found a switching power supply that will work on this desoldering gun station ZD-915 that the original switching power supply took a shit and just was not worth trying to fix it because this switching power is not quite big enough to handle the heater element and the vacuum pump

    One note when I tested the switching power supply and the voltage control board I noticed that this desoldering gun heat up much faster than the original switching power supply which I was really surprised by to the point that I might buy...
    03-31-2024, 02:12 PM
  • sam_sam_sam
    Modification to a ZD-987 desoldering/soldering station using a external switching power supply
    by sam_sam_sam
    I have been working on this concept for quite some time now with limited success but recently I found a switching power supply that is setup for the voltage that this soldering station needs to operate at however it also needs part of the secondary circuit from the original switching power because you need several voltage rails

    I once tried to get a ZD-915 desoldering station to work on a 18 volt battery power supply but unfortunately things did not go well but I did find a work around but I might try this idea again but going at a little differently more about this another time...
    07-01-2024, 06:34 AM
  • JimBanville
    Definitive technology SC 2000 subwoofer amp's power supply clicking and popping
    by JimBanville
    The sub developed a constant popping every couple seconds from woofer and power LED flickering with nothing but wall AC connected. Connecting an audio cable didn't change anything. It doesn't play but a second or two of audio in between the pops.
    Opened it up and discovered the power supply is making a faint clicking or ticking sound.
    I measured the amp's output to the woofer and it pulses up to 50mv DC to be driver. The pulses coincide with the power supply ticking/clicking.
    I measured the power supply output going to the amp board and it too has this pulsing. Voltage cycles...
    09-13-2023, 07:21 AM
  • CMCM
    Russound CA4 Power Supply Repair
    by CMCM
    Hello Everybody,

    Trying to repair a power supply from a Russound CA4 Multizone Controller (picture attached)

    Russound no longer supports it but were kind enough to provide a schematic of the power supply (pdf attached).

    The outputs marked 12v and 20v are all measuring only 1v.

    The board is clicking, which I think means it is in something called hiccup mode when the flyback transformers switches because of an internal problem or something else on the board Overloading it.

    The capacitors physically look clean (no bludgesor leaks) and...
    07-03-2025, 01:12 PM
  • Loading...
  • No more items.
Working...