Hello all ~
I have a thread on this already that I started back in February 2016, but had something pretty unusual happen so I decided to start a new thread and put the link to the old information here:
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=53388
So ......
After having this Philips 46” tv on the shelf for several months and having almost given up on it altogether, I pulled it out again this week and got the following surprising results:
I put the original PSU back in and got the familiar buzzing on what still appears to be the transformer (see the last attached photo on this post). Although, there is no physical vibration on this transformer whatsoever, which I found and still find odd.
Took it out, hooked up the PSU from the 40” version of this tv that I mistakenly bought. Got nothing, just as before.
Then, I put the 46” original PSU back in one more time and suddenly it came to life. The Philips logo came on, flickered for about 2 seconds and then the picture suddenly and firmly "locked in". The buzzing sound concurrently disappeared. Beforehand, this flickering and buzzing would go on for 30 seconds or so, then the tv would shut itself down. But at this semi-miraculous moment, everything was rather instantaneously perfect.
Since it was acting normally, I ran it all day on Tuesday. And then again on Wednesday and had it completely powered down and the power cord pulled out during the nighttime hours in between.
All the was good for 2 full days. But then this morning I put the back cover on and when I was done with that operation, both the buzzing and the flickering came back. Ended up taking the back panel off once again. Disconnected and reconnected all the ribbons and connectors, much to no avail. There was one, singular attempt I made about 5 minutes after that where the picture suddenly locked back into place again, but it was very short-lived. When I shut it down after about 10 minutes (as I would have had to do at some point in time anyway in order to put this particular back panel on again because of its design), ..... it proceeded to buzz and flicker again.
Question is:
What could possibly be responsible for this erratic behavior?
I also read another, similar thread here in Badcaps that was suggesting faulty CCFL’s? That seems like a fairly valid theory as well, based on the patterns of behavior I am dealing with. However, I don't think that's likely the case with mine because when it does lock in the picture is absolutely perfect. But maybe one or more of the lights is just barely malfunctioning? Anyone ever experienced that scenario?
NOTE: Below is one photo of the actual tv after it roared back to life, and the rest are stock photos of the set and the PSU. I’ll try to take some actual photos of the boards in my set this weekend. I am also going to replace two more capacitors that sit slightly above and to the left corner of the suspect transformer, but I don’t think that will likely fix this problem. I’ll update soon. For now, just curious if someone can help me nail down the likely cause as I’d rather not spend $75 - $85 for a new PSU when it might be a single component (or even one of the other boards).
~ kca
I have a thread on this already that I started back in February 2016, but had something pretty unusual happen so I decided to start a new thread and put the link to the old information here:
https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=53388
So ......
After having this Philips 46” tv on the shelf for several months and having almost given up on it altogether, I pulled it out again this week and got the following surprising results:
I put the original PSU back in and got the familiar buzzing on what still appears to be the transformer (see the last attached photo on this post). Although, there is no physical vibration on this transformer whatsoever, which I found and still find odd.
Took it out, hooked up the PSU from the 40” version of this tv that I mistakenly bought. Got nothing, just as before.
Then, I put the 46” original PSU back in one more time and suddenly it came to life. The Philips logo came on, flickered for about 2 seconds and then the picture suddenly and firmly "locked in". The buzzing sound concurrently disappeared. Beforehand, this flickering and buzzing would go on for 30 seconds or so, then the tv would shut itself down. But at this semi-miraculous moment, everything was rather instantaneously perfect.
Since it was acting normally, I ran it all day on Tuesday. And then again on Wednesday and had it completely powered down and the power cord pulled out during the nighttime hours in between.
All the was good for 2 full days. But then this morning I put the back cover on and when I was done with that operation, both the buzzing and the flickering came back. Ended up taking the back panel off once again. Disconnected and reconnected all the ribbons and connectors, much to no avail. There was one, singular attempt I made about 5 minutes after that where the picture suddenly locked back into place again, but it was very short-lived. When I shut it down after about 10 minutes (as I would have had to do at some point in time anyway in order to put this particular back panel on again because of its design), ..... it proceeded to buzz and flicker again.
Question is:
What could possibly be responsible for this erratic behavior?
- Can a faulty capacitor do this (meaning, allow for several hours (two days, really) of perfect play, then revert to a flawed picture accompanied by the buzzing sound)?
- Can a faulty diode do that?
- Can a faulty transformer do that?
- Or, is there some other component or board that can be the source of this off / periodically on / mostly off again behavior?
I also read another, similar thread here in Badcaps that was suggesting faulty CCFL’s? That seems like a fairly valid theory as well, based on the patterns of behavior I am dealing with. However, I don't think that's likely the case with mine because when it does lock in the picture is absolutely perfect. But maybe one or more of the lights is just barely malfunctioning? Anyone ever experienced that scenario?
NOTE: Below is one photo of the actual tv after it roared back to life, and the rest are stock photos of the set and the PSU. I’ll try to take some actual photos of the boards in my set this weekend. I am also going to replace two more capacitors that sit slightly above and to the left corner of the suspect transformer, but I don’t think that will likely fix this problem. I’ll update soon. For now, just curious if someone can help me nail down the likely cause as I’d rather not spend $75 - $85 for a new PSU when it might be a single component (or even one of the other boards).
~ kca
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