Hi everyone
I am trying to repair my former TV, an LG 37LE5500, mainly for learning purposes.
The issue is: when I turn the TV on it starts blinking and rebooting, repeating this cycle for about 10-30secs. After that, it works correctly with no issues.
I started by looking at the power supply (EAY60803001; attached front and back pictures provided by shopjimmy) measuring the following lines (bunch of cables going to main board):
PIN *******StandBy PWR ON
-------------------------------------------------------
ERR-OUT 2.864 2.838
P-DIM 0.252 1.202
N.C. *******- -
DRV-ON 0.061 1.932
N.C. *******- -
GND ***** - -
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
GND *******- -
GND *** - -
20V *******0 18.43
20V *******0 18.43
N.C. * -
12V ******0 12.07
12V ******0 12.07
12V ******0 12.07
GND ***** - -
GND ***** - -
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
GND ***** - -
GND ***** - -
20V *******0 18.43
PWR-ON 0 3.323
I found that 20V and 3.5V lines differ about 10% from what they should be reading when TV is on. Note when in stand by 3.5V *line are pretty accurate, 3.49.
So I decided to trace the 20V back, checking for bad components; I reached *to the area from the attached picture (closer look, with numbers). Here, if I read in-circuit resistors values and obtaining completely different values then they should be for most of them.
Values are:
1. resistor code 203 **-> reading 18.35K
2. resistor code 4701 -> reading 3.784K
3. resistor code 203 *-> reading 4.80K
4. resistor code 102 *-> reading 962 ohms
5. resistor code 2203 *-> reading 22.63K
6. resistor code 105 *-> reading 8.89K
7. Cap not shorted (don't know if its good or not)
8. resistor code 272 *-> reading 4.68K
9. resistor code 153 *-> reading 15.06K
I have other SMD resistors spread around the power supply board: for example 105 which are reading 0.85Mohms a couple more 202 reading 1.5K
Is this way of reading smd resistors fine? If yes, does this mean I have all these resistors failing? aren't they so many?
Thanks in advance
I am trying to repair my former TV, an LG 37LE5500, mainly for learning purposes.
The issue is: when I turn the TV on it starts blinking and rebooting, repeating this cycle for about 10-30secs. After that, it works correctly with no issues.
I started by looking at the power supply (EAY60803001; attached front and back pictures provided by shopjimmy) measuring the following lines (bunch of cables going to main board):
PIN *******StandBy PWR ON
-------------------------------------------------------
ERR-OUT 2.864 2.838
P-DIM 0.252 1.202
N.C. *******- -
DRV-ON 0.061 1.932
N.C. *******- -
GND ***** - -
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
GND *******- -
GND *** - -
20V *******0 18.43
20V *******0 18.43
N.C. * -
12V ******0 12.07
12V ******0 12.07
12V ******0 12.07
GND ***** - -
GND ***** - -
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
3.5V *******3.49 3.455
GND ***** - -
GND ***** - -
20V *******0 18.43
PWR-ON 0 3.323
I found that 20V and 3.5V lines differ about 10% from what they should be reading when TV is on. Note when in stand by 3.5V *line are pretty accurate, 3.49.
So I decided to trace the 20V back, checking for bad components; I reached *to the area from the attached picture (closer look, with numbers). Here, if I read in-circuit resistors values and obtaining completely different values then they should be for most of them.
Values are:
1. resistor code 203 **-> reading 18.35K
2. resistor code 4701 -> reading 3.784K
3. resistor code 203 *-> reading 4.80K
4. resistor code 102 *-> reading 962 ohms
5. resistor code 2203 *-> reading 22.63K
6. resistor code 105 *-> reading 8.89K
7. Cap not shorted (don't know if its good or not)
8. resistor code 272 *-> reading 4.68K
9. resistor code 153 *-> reading 15.06K
I have other SMD resistors spread around the power supply board: for example 105 which are reading 0.85Mohms a couple more 202 reading 1.5K
Is this way of reading smd resistors fine? If yes, does this mean I have all these resistors failing? aren't they so many?
Thanks in advance

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