LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • frica
    Member
    • Nov 2017
    • 37
    • Spain

    #21
    Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

    Dear R_J

    Thank you for your clear response! I will take note: the best test is measure the zener voltage in circuit and with the PBC power on.

    Thank you R_J!! I read many message from your. I am like a fan of you!!

    Comment

    • yohnsee
      Semi-noob
      • Dec 2017
      • 198
      • Hungary

      #22
      Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

      Originally posted by frica
      Hello yohnsee:

      Wondeful that you could repair the PSU!!

      For the very newbie one in electronic repair, could you explain in detail how do you test the zener diode especially the regulator function?

      I know that a zener is like a normal dode in forward polarization and as a regulator in inverse polarization. With a multimeter and the PBC no energized I know test the diode function. But how did you test the regulator function using a multimeter in ohm scale? or only tested if both ends of zener had very low ohmios?

      do you test in ohmio scale o in diode scale? Do you test in circuit? did you test in forward polarization (positive probe in Anode and negative probe in catode) or/and inverse polizarization?

      thank you!!
      Hello and welcome to the forum!

      First of all, as I see you have a lot to learn about electronics, but don't worry, no one was born with this knowledge. And second, you came to the right place, on badcaps every member is willing to help (so far I have noticed).
      R_J told you how you can test the zener breakdown, but if you are more a visual type, watch this: Zener testing.
      First when I test a bad behaving circuit, I try to break down it to parts, and focus only on the part that seems problematic. In my case, the 5V standby voltage was fine, only the switched voltages showed problems. So I didn't bother with the standby circuit, instead I focused on the rest of the schematic. You could read about switchmode power supplies on many places, and when you understand the main working concept of it, then you can guess which part works abnormal. Reading back my first post, now it seems obvious that the feedback of the regulator was faulty. And indeed, this zener let the voltage rise above normal levels (didn't clamp as it should have) and that's why I had overvoltage on the secondary side. It may be a bad advice, but I always imagined the zener diode as:
      a regular diode, unless it gets higher voltage on the cathode side than the rated breakdown voltage, because in this case it will conduct like a wire. But as soon as this happens, the voltage drops below breakdown level and the diode function comes back. All of the above happens in a fraction of a second, so you or your multimeter won't notice it. The only thing you or the circuit will see is steady voltage. Of course, it can be applied to signaling, you can't draw power from it.
      Hope this helps.
      Cheers, Janos

      Comment

      • frica
        Member
        • Nov 2017
        • 37
        • Spain

        #23
        Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

        Thanks for your words yohnsee!! Yes I see that this is the best electronic forum I found (well I visit other forum in spanish that is good also). Since several years ago I have learned much about electronic repair and love discover what is the culprit! I have many notes and documents save in my PC. thanks for the video! And thanks for the notes about zeners!

        Comment

        • gorgi991
          New Member
          • Sep 2019
          • 3
          • Greece

          #24
          Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

          hello i have the same pcb
          in the 24v rail i get 13volt, light goes blue but the inverter lights doesnt light up,can you suggest me where to look at?

          Comment

          • peterkos2
            Member
            • Nov 2020
            • 43
            • Slovensko

            #25
            Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

            Hello everyone.
            I also have a problem with this power supply.
            After connecting to the mains, the st-by LED flashes - weaker-stronger, turns off, weaker, stronger, turns off.
            It tries to turn on. I checked the capacitors - one was weaker, I changed it but still the same and in a minute, two it turns on and works.
            I resoldered some connections, but now I don't know what to do next.
            I also checked the diodes and mosfets - they look OK.
            Sometimes it can be turned on for the first time
            Thank you for your response
            Last edited by peterkos2; 05-24-2023, 09:21 AM.

            Comment

            • yohnsee
              Semi-noob
              • Dec 2017
              • 198
              • Hungary

              #26
              Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

              Originally posted by peterkos2
              Hello everyone.
              I also have a problem with this power supply.
              After connecting to the mains, the st-by LED flashes - weaker-stronger, turns off, weaker, stronger, turns off.
              It tries to turn on. I checked the capacitors - one was weaker, I changed it but still the same and in a minute, two it turns on and works.
              I resoldered some connections, but now I don't know what to do next.
              I also checked the diodes and mosfets - they look OK.
              Sometimes it can be turned on for the first time
              Thank you for your response
              Hello,
              So if I get it right, you did not remove the PSU from the TV, and all the symptoms you have can be seen when you want to start the TV?
              From what you described, I can only think of a capacitor problem.
              Think about it: standby led flashing stronger-weaker-stronger-(then the TV should turn on). But in your case it only starts the blink sequence again. From this I would assume the PSU does not have the needed power reserves to start the display, MB and backlight at the same time. Either one of these components ask for higher current than it should, or the PSU does not have what is needed.
              You also wrote, you checked the capacitors. Did you measure them, or just took a look at them? If it was with some measuring tool, what was it?
              (many people would not share my views, but I have a rule for myself: if the PSU I am about to repair is older than 5 years, I blindly re-cap the whole board before checking anything else. This way I can be sure, the caps are not playing funny games with me)
              I wouldn't suspect the semiconductors first, as you tested (or optically checked) the diodes and FETs.
              Also, for fun, you can do the following test: Remove the PSU, put it in the refrigerator for 15 minutes (or freeze it a little bit with freeze spray, if you have such thing), then reconnect it to the TV, and try to start. I bet it won't turn on.
              Then, grab a hairdryer, and get the PSU board up to like 40-50 degress celsius. It can even stay in the TV for the time. After it is good and warm, it will start instantly.
              The tests above also conclude that the PSU has capacitors that has almost lost all of their capacity. If you warm it up a little bit, their capacitance increases temporary. That happens, when you try to start the TV at room temperature, and it struggles for 1-2 minutes, then starts. During this time the capacitors get a bit warmer, thus having that little plus juice to start the circuits.
              Let me know, if it helped.
              Cheers, Janos

              Comment

              • peterkos2
                Member
                • Nov 2020
                • 43
                • Slovensko

                #27
                Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

                I tested the capacitors with an ESR meter, they all looked fine. I measured the mosfets and diodes with a diode test - fine.

                Comment

                • peterkos2
                  Member
                  • Nov 2020
                  • 43
                  • Slovensko

                  #28
                  Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

                  You were right, I put it in the fridge for 15 minutes and after connecting it just tried to turn on. I heated it with a heat gun and after a while it turned on. It is interesting that I measured the capacitors. It will probably be necessary to desolder and then measure. Thank you so far

                  Comment

                  • yohnsee
                    Semi-noob
                    • Dec 2017
                    • 198
                    • Hungary

                    #29
                    Re: LG PSU EAY40504401 (LGP32-08H) repair

                    Originally posted by peterkos2
                    You were right, I put it in the fridge for 15 minutes and after connecting it just tried to turn on. I heated it with a heat gun and after a while it turned on. It is interesting that I measured the capacitors. It will probably be necessary to desolder and then measure. Thank you so far
                    In-circuit measurements can lead you in the wrong direction. Nevertheless, I am curious about the solution.
                    Cheers, Janos

                    Comment

                    Related Topics

                    Collapse

                    • Tarot Superstars
                      How The AC stage of an Adaptor works
                      by Tarot Superstars
                      Hi. I have been watching videos on how a power adaptor works.
                      There is explanation of the rectifier bridge to the pulse width modulator, the mosfet for switching, and opto-couplers, but there is little to nothing about the AC stage of the transformer the powers the primary coil.

                      So, I see that the PWM needs DC to work, but I don't see anything about how the AC gets from the mains supply to the transformer stage.
                      A transformer only works on AC so where is that part of the circuit.
                      I only see Capacitors on the output. Should I assume that the secondary coil and...
                      09-27-2023, 01:00 PM
                    • jm1234
                      opto something Liteon 816A4
                      by jm1234
                      Hi,
                      I'm troubleshooting a power supply board and one opto coupler seems shorted. It's a through-hole, marked with 3 lines:
                      1223
                      816A4
                      W
                      I'm not sure what replacement to buy for it. It resembles LTV-816 (https://www.tme.eu/sk/en/details/ltv...output/liteon/), but I'm not sure it's 100% that. The data sheet shows multiple sub-types like 816M, 816S, but 816A is not there.
                      I do have other functional pieces on the same board, so I could do some measurements on those, but I'm not sure what to check.
                      Any idea appreciated.
                      05-20-2024, 03:30 AM
                    • прямо
                      Viper22A 5VSB circuit
                      by прямо
                      So I have a cheap non working ATX PSU that I was learning to repair a decade ago. At the time, it blew the main fuse, bridger rectifier, NTC, and primary 9A 900V MOSFET. Replaced all except the MOSFET. 5VSB came back online. Then I poked around in it so much, measuring components one by one to a point I accidentally made the 5VSB circuit primary side went bang. Blown the AP8022 (Viper22A) PWM chip, along with a low resistance resistor and the PC817 opto isolator. I replaced them all.

                      In the process of poking around, I also lost a zener diode that stabilize the voltage coming from...
                      01-13-2024, 07:05 PM
                    • dicky96
                      Xilence XP600 600w ATX PSU - No PWM Controller on primary side - how does it work?
                      by dicky96
                      Hi guys
                      I have a faulty Xilence ATX PSU here

                      The fault basically is I have two short circuit power transistors on the primary side of the large SMPS transformer - they are 2SC3320.

                      There is another smaller transistor on the primary side C3866 which tests ok

                      The PSU has three transformers - it looks like the 2SC3320's drive the big one and the C3866 drives one of the small ones. There is a separate PFC PCB with it's own controller and MoSFETS

                      There is also a short on the 3.3V output and a near short on 5V - I suspect this probably blew...
                      05-11-2021, 07:55 AM
                    • japlytic
                      Could all new PC motherboards only require a primary 12V rail?
                      by japlytic
                      This is a possibility, but future PC motherboards could only require a single 12V primary rail with +3.3V/+5V (-12V is only required for PCI slots (and certain cards thereof) but not PCI Express slots) switching regulator circuitry (which is now quite compact for their high output) on the motherboard with SATA power output connectors on the motherboard.
                      Most newer ATX (and related counterpart) power supplies over a certain wattage typically have a single primary rail of +12V which is then connected to independent +3.3V/+5V/-12V switching regulator modules; also, many hot swap server PSUs...
                      07-10-2020, 12:58 AM
                    • Loading...
                    • No more items.
                    Working...