I work for a computer repair shop in Anchorage, AK and had a customer bring in their Viewsonic N3260w. They described the problem as "I was watching TV, heard a loud POP! and now it wont turn on." Having fixed dozens of displays, desktops and other various electronics with bad caps, I was fairly confident this would be an easy cap replacement. I did not expect to see what I found inside....
One exploded capacitor (see picture for the remains) on the power board. It had blown off the canister with enough force to dent it. Under the aluminum cover on the power board, EVERY SINGLE capacitor was bulging or blown (don't have a picture of it...I took one, but it wasnt on my camera when i plugged it in....
). Literally, every capacitor was bad on this power board. There were 7 or 8 different capacitances and voltages and they were all bad. Mostly, they were fyuujican (or however its spelled), but there were also a few samxons as well. After recapping the board, the power came on, but nothing would display on the screen.
After double checking all my work, I came to the conclusion that it would need a new power board, so I set off to find one. I ended up picking a new one up ebay--from the ramplus ebay store if anyone is interested. To my surprise, the new power board was sporting nichicon and rubycon caps. Not surprisingly, after installing the new power board, the TV fired right up and was working beautifully.
I am kinda surprised a newish TV like this one would have the capacitor plague.
One exploded capacitor (see picture for the remains) on the power board. It had blown off the canister with enough force to dent it. Under the aluminum cover on the power board, EVERY SINGLE capacitor was bulging or blown (don't have a picture of it...I took one, but it wasnt on my camera when i plugged it in....

After double checking all my work, I came to the conclusion that it would need a new power board, so I set off to find one. I ended up picking a new one up ebay--from the ramplus ebay store if anyone is interested. To my surprise, the new power board was sporting nichicon and rubycon caps. Not surprisingly, after installing the new power board, the TV fired right up and was working beautifully.
I am kinda surprised a newish TV like this one would have the capacitor plague.
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