Lg 60pz250n-zb

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Joepeff
    Member
    • Nov 2018
    • 12
    • Sweden

    #1

    Lg 60pz250n-zb

    I'll start off with saying that I'm very new to tv-repairs.
    With that said, I have an LG 60PZ250N-ZB in my home, which I happened to find in the garbage room.

    The TV worked just fine, but I noticed some grainy noise, going mainly horizontally across the screen, in certain lighting. Could be bright or dark, mostly bright.

    After some searching I figured it could be what's known as "mal discharge" so I got myself some documentation from LG for this.

    Then I found this site, and Topcat wrote about the "sparklies".

    I decided to test the Va and Vs with a DMM and found the voltages off by a volt or so. Keep in mind that I have a very cheap DMM. I am thinking this isn't the brightest thing to use, but I have an incredibly limited budget.

    So, I adjusted the pots to get the correct Va and Vs, but upon testing Vs on the YSUS board I happened to short the 5v and the Vs (55v) lines.
    I hear buzzing from the YSUS board when I plug in the AC cord, which I heard prior to shorting, and the buzzing now stops ~3 seconds after plugging in.

    On the control board, the green LED flashes 4 times (long, long, short, short). I have no idea how the LED was lighting before shorting because I did not look.

    So, without jumping to any further conclusions, I'd like to ask for some opinions on what to do next. Should I replace the PSU? I'm not quite sure how to test what components might have fried since I have very limited equipment.

    Thanks for taking the time to read my post.
    Last edited by Joepeff; 11-28-2018, 12:01 PM.
  • Joepeff
    Member
    • Nov 2018
    • 12
    • Sweden

    #2
    Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

    After plugging in the AC cord again to do some testing, i found that Va and Vs was lower than I'd left it. After adjusting to the correct value I heard a click from the PSU and the voltage was steadily dropping.

    I could sure use some help here

    ---------

    So, as it turns out, I can't set Va/Vs to the correct values. Va=55 and Vs=201.
    Vs is currently at 210 and wont go under 208 as I lower the pot. It just ends up shutting off the TV, which is the click I heard.
    Last edited by Joepeff; 11-28-2018, 12:26 PM.

    Comment

    • Joepeff
      Member
      • Nov 2018
      • 12
      • Sweden

      #3
      Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

      I suspect the power supply might be done for.
      I disconnected all the boards, and the voltage on Vs keeps going up even though the pot is set to minimum...

      Comment

      • Joepeff
        Member
        • Nov 2018
        • 12
        • Sweden

        #4
        Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

        Any pointers would be appreciated, even if it's pointing me in the direction of giving up.

        Comment

        • Andrew F. Ali
          Badcaps Legend
          • Jan 2014
          • 2450
          • Trinidad & Tobago

          #5
          Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

          Could we at least get photos to see what we are dealing with? I suspect this is why you aren't getting responses. I would need to see a clear focused close up of the PSU and all its connectors so I can read the pin labels. Thanks.

          Comment

          • tvtimmy
            Badcaps Legend
            • Mar 2015
            • 1160
            • usa

            #6
            Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

            Post a picture of the Asus board. Top and bottom. Make sure your model number is correct.
            DO NOT RUN THE SET WITH ANY MOUNTING SCREWS REMOVED !!!!

            Comment

            • Joepeff
              Member
              • Nov 2018
              • 12
              • Sweden

              #7
              Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

              Here are some photos of the PSU and connectors along with an overview shot of all the boards.

              I'm not sure which is the Asus board. I only see the Ysus and Zsus boards.

              Thanks for the response!

              ----
              Edit: Sorry about the flipped images. They're cropped and fixed now.
              Attached Files
              Last edited by Joepeff; 11-29-2018, 06:35 AM.

              Comment

              • Andrew F. Ali
                Badcaps Legend
                • Jan 2014
                • 2450
                • Trinidad & Tobago

                #8
                Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                Disconnect the connector on the PSU to the Main Bd. Connect GND and Auto-GND with a jumper. Connect a 100Ohm resistor across 5.1 and RL-ON. connect another 100Ohm resistor across 5.1 and M-ON. Make a test lamp by connecting two 120Vac household lightbulbs in series. Disconnect P811 to the Y-sus Bd. Connect the test lamp across Vs and GND on P811. Apply the 120Vac. If the PSU is good the test lamp should come ON and light-up bright. Measure Vs, Va and M5V on P811. (You may have to readjust the pot to get VS on the correct voltage as stated on the label , as you did interfere with it. If all these test show good then PSU is good if not then the PSU is at fault.

                Comment

                • Joepeff
                  Member
                  • Nov 2018
                  • 12
                  • Sweden

                  #9
                  Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                  Originally posted by Andrew F. Ali
                  Apply the 120Vac. If the PSU is good the test lamp should come ON and light-up bright. Measure Vs, Va and M5V on P811. (You may have to readjust the pot to get VS on the correct voltage as stated on the label , as you did interfere with it. If all these test show good then PSU is good if not then the PSU is at fault.
                  As I've mentioned, the pots no longer help lower the voltages. The Vs and Va pots are on minimum. Vs rises until a peak of 256V

                  Besides that, I'm curious as to why I should use 120Vac lightbulbs and apply 120Vac to the PSU, since we use 230Vac in Sweden..
                  If I should use our mains line voltage (230Vac) instead, should I still do two 230Vac lightbulbs in series?

                  Comment

                  • Andrew F. Ali
                    Badcaps Legend
                    • Jan 2014
                    • 2450
                    • Trinidad & Tobago

                    #10
                    Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                    OK. I didn't read your profile and country of origin. So use one 230Vac light bulb as your test lamp across Vs and GND then plug the power cable into the 230Vac. Some PSU will go into protect mode without a load and shutdown. Hence the 230Vac household lightbulb as a load for Vs.

                    This is part of what you said in Post 1: "So, I adjusted the pots to get the correct Va and Vs, but upon testing Vs on the YSUS board I happened to short the 5v and the Vs (55v) lines.
                    I hear buzzing from the YSUS board when I plug in the AC cord, which I heard prior to shorting, and the buzzing now stops ~3 seconds after plugging in."
                    So I was just trying to help you out by showing how to self-test your PSU to verify it is OK so we could look elsewhere to fix this TV.
                    BTW the Va would be around 55V and the Vs maybe round185-210V. I am guessing here as I did not see a photo of the label voltages on the Panel.

                    Comment

                    • Joepeff
                      Member
                      • Nov 2018
                      • 12
                      • Sweden

                      #11
                      Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                      I see.
                      Well when running only the PSU (no other boards connected) the PSU will not go into protect mode. Perhaps the voltage climbs due to no load. I don't know.

                      To be clear: Vs and Va were both off by about 1V prior to testing, so I fixed that. I then shorted M5V and Va while testing the voltages on the power input of the Ysus bd.

                      1) Should I leave Zsus bd plugged in?
                      2) Should I leave ctrl bd plugged in?

                      I need to get my hands on some resistors before I can do this.


                      Here is an image of the panel voltage label and one of where the short occured on the Ysus bd.
                      Attached Files

                      Comment

                      • Andrew F. Ali
                        Badcaps Legend
                        • Jan 2014
                        • 2450
                        • Trinidad & Tobago

                        #12
                        Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                        Disconnect the Z-sus Bd as well, when performing the test I suggested. Without a load on the Vs it may go into protect mode. Must test PSU with the light bulb load. Shorting the 5V on the Y-sus Bd would affect the PSU and not necessarily the Y-sus Bd. So you are looking for Vs at 201Vdc and Va at 55Vdc. Measuring/testing without the load will give erroneous result.

                        Comment

                        • R_J
                          Badcaps Legend
                          • Jun 2012
                          • 9535
                          • Canada

                          #13
                          Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                          If you shorted Va55 volts to M5volts you damaged the power supply M5 volt circuit. What voltage do you have on M5 now? is it 0?
                          Check the voltage on J54 of the power supply, It should be 5 to 6 volts
                          If it is zero volts, check Q353 and the zener diode next to it.
                          Chck F302 fuse on the power supply
                          Last edited by R_J; 11-29-2018, 03:30 PM.

                          Comment

                          • Joepeff
                            Member
                            • Nov 2018
                            • 12
                            • Sweden

                            #14
                            Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                            Since I don't have any resistors at the moment I can't run Andrews tests.
                            Having all boards disconnected, including Ctrl Bd, I tested M5V on J54.
                            With no load it read 7.3V.

                            I can't find Q353, and I can't find a schematic for my board in order to locate it. Could you highlight on the board where I might find it?
                            I searched for zener diodes to help me locate Q353 to no avail.
                            Only ZD101 and Q101 were next to each other, and ZD101 is the only zener diode I can find.

                            F302 is fine.

                            Comment

                            • tvtimmy
                              Badcaps Legend
                              • Mar 2015
                              • 1160
                              • usa

                              #15
                              Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                              Check all 4 fuses on the ysus. Then check all on the ysus. Remove both boards from the tv and look at the solder that is on the bottom side on the 3 copper coils. A crack or a ring is bad.

                              Comment

                              • R_J
                                Badcaps Legend
                                • Jun 2012
                                • 9535
                                • Canada

                                #16
                                Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                                Do you have the M5 voltage at the plug where you shorted the M5v to Va?
                                Are you sure you shorted Va to M5 or was it Va shorted to ground (the other pin next to Va)
                                If there is no regulation on the Vs or Va, check the components around the adjustment controls, likely either an open resistor like R515 (white ceramic) or the control. or a shorted transistor or diode.


                                I don't have a schematic only the picture of the board.
                                Last edited by R_J; 11-29-2018, 09:15 PM.

                                Comment

                                • Joepeff
                                  Member
                                  • Nov 2018
                                  • 12
                                  • Sweden

                                  #17
                                  Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                                  Originally posted by tvtimmy
                                  Check all 4 fuses on the ysus. Then check all on the ysus. Remove both boards from the tv and look at the solder that is on the bottom side on the 3 copper coils. A crack or a ring is bad.
                                  Indeed each of the three rings have a ring on one joint.
                                  Bad in what sense?
                                  I'm going to re-solder those joints now.

                                  ---

                                  Edit: turns out my soldering iron wont go hot enough for that.
                                  Last edited by Joepeff; 11-30-2018, 05:43 AM.

                                  Comment

                                  • Joepeff
                                    Member
                                    • Nov 2018
                                    • 12
                                    • Sweden

                                    #18
                                    Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                                    Originally posted by R_J
                                    Do you have the M5 voltage at the plug where you shorted the M5v to Va?
                                    Are you sure you shorted Va to M5 or was it Va shorted to ground (the other pin next to Va)
                                    Yes, I am sure. I shorted the M5 with Va using my positive test lead of my DMM.
                                    I'm quite sure the negative lead was grounded as I was testing voltages.

                                    Comment

                                    • tvtimmy
                                      Badcaps Legend
                                      • Mar 2015
                                      • 1160
                                      • usa

                                      #19
                                      Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                                      The bad solder joints are causing your malcharge issue. Resoldering with dead solder will fix this problem. Check the fuses and tighten the screws.

                                      Comment

                                      • Joepeff
                                        Member
                                        • Nov 2018
                                        • 12
                                        • Sweden

                                        #20
                                        Re: Lg 60pz250n-zb

                                        I'm going to invest in a soldering station and some resistors, and I will post here again once I've performed the tests suggested.

                                        Also, as the solder is wouldn't melt with my 30W soldering iron, I'm curious what solder I should repair my board with. Any tips?
                                        Also, what is dead solder?
                                        Last edited by Joepeff; 11-30-2018, 02:37 PM.

                                        Comment

                                        Related Topics

                                        Collapse

                                        • DynaxSC
                                          Extreme High Current & Low Voltage Short Killer ??
                                          by DynaxSC
                                          Hi Folks

                                          I'm looking for a extreme high current short killer solution for a reasonable cost.

                                          I have an LGA1700 motherboard (ASUS PRIME Z790-P WiFi) where I exchanged the LGA socket already 3 times, and every time after the socket exchange I get a short of power supply lines VCORE (V variable) and VCCIN_AUX (1.8V).
                                          After taking off the socket, the shorts dissappear again.
                                          The soldermask on the socket is already partially demaged from the heat, so I have reconstructed the soldermask by manually painting the missing soldermask parts with a very small top of a...
                                          10-15-2024, 10:13 AM
                                        • Stephen
                                          MacBook Pro 14" A2442 Short on PPBUS_AON but no short present when injecting voltage!
                                          by Stephen
                                          I check PPBUS_AON and there is a short present on the line, the computer shows a short when testing for short to ground, so when I inject voltage into the line, I get 0AMPS so no short is showing up. I have replaced a blown cap on this board that exploded and tested for the short and it is now removed. Any suggestions? I tested voltage at the line when the fuses are connected and I am getting 1.2 Volts at the line.
                                          02-06-2025, 12:03 PM
                                        • Victor Moreira Silva
                                          Acer Nitro 5 LA-L181p power LED turns on by 5 secs (Short on PCH rail?)
                                          by Victor Moreira Silva
                                          Hello everyone,

                                          I'm trying to repair my old Acer Nitro 5 (AN517-54-55T5). I've already bought a new laptop, so this is more of a learning project. For the experience, with no high expectations of success.

                                          Well, my decice specs are the following:

                                          Model: Acer Nitro 5 AN517-54-55T5
                                          CPU: Intel Core i5-11400H
                                          GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650
                                          Motherboard: GH51G LA-L181P Rev:1c

                                          The symptom:
                                          When pressing the power button, the power LED lights up for about 5 seconds and then turns off. Initially, the issue was intermittent: sometimes...
                                          05-26-2025, 10:49 AM
                                        • aaronkatrini
                                          Help me find the short circuit on this WORKING Nvidia GTX1650
                                          by aaronkatrini
                                          Hi all,

                                          Recently picked up this GTX1650 at a local flea market for a low price and wanted to use it on my secondary PC. I first tested the card and saw the fan spin for a split second and then nothing. Immediately I thought of a short circuit. Disassembled and found a shorted SMD capacitor, injected voltage into it (1V/4A) and two Mosfets got hot immediately (QN3103 & QN3107). Desoldered these Mosfets and the card turned back to life.

                                          Bought replacements from Aliexpress and replaced them afterwards. Tried the card but still the saw the fan spin for a split second...
                                          04-18-2024, 03:15 PM
                                        • Geeker007
                                          9th Gen Dell Optiplex Micro PC motherboard repair: Short Circuit?
                                          by Geeker007
                                          Hi All, I have a 9th Gen Dell Optiplex micro PC motherboard which doesn't power on. When I connect the motherboard with power adapter, it goes into safe mode and turns off. So from info I have gathered online, it looks like there is a short circuit on the motherboard. So can you guys help me with figuring out the issue?

                                          I am new to electronics repair, so my queries could be naive but I am ready to learn.

                                          So I have a multimeter and a solder with me. But I can try to get a variable voltage power supply with a thermal camera as well. From what I seen online, best way is...
                                          01-28-2025, 03:31 PM
                                        • Loading...
                                        • No more items.
                                        Working...