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  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Any suggestions on replacing the solder pads? I was doing really well today removing (from another monitor) one FU9024 and two C5707s until one side of the C5707 solder pads all came loose. All that effort installing new components only to have the last C5707 screw up. :-(

    I heard something about solder glue as an alternative to solder?

    This missing pad looks like another post at (2nd hole)

    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/attach...chmentid=16725

    After 10 or 11 repairs, I have only had problems lately with the solder pads coming off. In both cases, the monitors were 2003/2004 heritage.

    Originally posted by el3ctroded
    The reason you had so much trouble is your soldering iron is likely not powerful enough to heat the part and power/gnd copper planes on the PCB, or there was no flux left in the solder, or both. The reason solder didn't want to stick to the board is the same reason: You were likely not getting the solder point hot enough, most likely due to a too-small wattage iron.
    Last edited by retiredcaps; 07-08-2010, 12:49 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Hmm, I missed one variation of this test.

    With the LVDS cable unplugged, I can use the remote to turn the TV ON and OFF. Also, with the remote, I was able to switch the TV to composite and hear sound.

    Once I found sound and composite source, I powered off the TV, plugged the LVDS cable back in and I saw the TV say something like "Composite Input no signal, monitor going to sleep" and the green power LED turns to red after about 5 seconds.

    So I try again. I unplug the LVDS cable and I get audio, a white screen, but no picture. I power off and replug in the LVDS cable and I get no audio, no picture, and no message about a missing input signal.

    Originally posted by retiredcaps
    With the LVDS cable unplugged, I can the TV ON and OFF using the front panel button.

    Leave a comment:


  • el3ctroded
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    No display on the panel points to main board being faulty as you originally suspected.

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Good suggestion. I tried this with a working DVD player and known good cables and composite/audio outputs.

    I hooked it up and cycled through the source button on the remote and front panel and I hear no audio. I tried turning up the volume up/down on the front panel via knob and remote control. I also tried pressing the mute button several times and still no sound.

    I found something new that I initially didn't find. With the LVDS cable plugged in, I can turn ON the TV via front panel by pressing in the button, but I cannot turn it OFF by pressing the front panel. I also cannot turn it ON or OFF via the remote.

    With the LVDS cable unplugged, I can the TV ON and OFF using the front panel button.

    Originally posted by PlainBill
    Another trick I use is to hook up an old video game or other signal source with composite out to the composite inputs. Then I step through the inputs until I hear the sound out of the speakers.

    PlainBill

    Leave a comment:


  • el3ctroded
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Well, at least we verified the CCFLs. How about seeing if there's any display on the screen using a flashlight?

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Good point. So I took another LCD panel and tested it in the following manner.

    All tests below without the LVDS cable plugged in.

    1) Inverter board CN5 connected to Daytek CCFL tube "1" while the other 3 (CN4, CN3, and Cn2) are connected to an external LCD panel.

    Result: Daytek LCD panel is white -> CCFL tube 1 works.

    2) Same as above, but CN4 connected to Daytek CCFL tube "2" while the other 3 (CN5, CN3, CN2) are connected to an external LCD panel.

    Result: Daytek LCD panel is white -> CCFL tube 2 works.

    I did the same for CN3 and CN2 and CCFL tube 3 and 4 works.

    In all cases, the external LCD panel was white.

    However, WITH the LVDS cable plugged in and doing the exact same tests above, I get nothing on the Daytek LCD or external LCD screen.

    I'm ready to test more suggestions.

    Originally posted by el3ctroded
    Don't assume. Test 1 at a time. Looks like you have 4 CCFLs, so it would be hard to tell if just 1 failed.

    Leave a comment:


  • el3ctroded
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Don't assume. Test 1 at a time. Looks like you have 4 CCFLs, so it would be hard to tell if just 1 failed.

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    When I disconnect the LVDS cable, I get a full white screen on solid (not a brief flash). To me, this would infer, both CCFLs are working.

    Originally posted by el3ctroded
    Do you have anything to use to test the CCFLs? 1 may be bad, though it usually will flash at turn-on when 1 is bad... I usually connect 1 at a time to find the bad one.

    Leave a comment:


  • el3ctroded
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Do you have anything to use to test the CCFLs? 1 may be bad, though it usually will flash at turn-on when 1 is bad... I usually connect 1 at a time to find the bad one.

    LCD Monitors also usually will display on the screen, you just can't see it cause of the backlight not being on. Use a bright flashlight and an input with a bright background being displayed to see if you are getting any display on the panel.

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Happy 4th of July to all the American readers!

    IC 501 - LM25765
    ================

    pin 1 - VIN - 12.23V
    pin 2 - OUT - 4.98V
    pin 3 - GND
    pin 4 - feedback - 4.92V
    pin 5 - on/off - 0.01V

    IC504 - AME1085
    ===============

    pin 1 - GND
    pin 2 - OUT - 3.31V
    pin 3 - VIN - 4.92V

    IC302 - AMS1117 2.5
    ===================

    pin 1 - GND
    pin 2 - OUT - 2.52V
    pin 3 - VIN - 4.92V

    IC9 - 78M05
    ===========

    pin 1 - VIN - 12.21V
    pin 2 - GND
    pin 3 - OUT - 5.01V

    IC1 - AMS1117 3.3
    =================

    pin 1 - GND
    pin 2 - OUT - 3.31V
    pin 3 - VIN - 4.93V

    IC702 - AMS1117 3.3
    ===================

    pin 1 - GND
    pin 2 - OUT - 3.31V
    pin 3 - VIN - 4.93V

    IC801 - MC7809C
    ===============

    pin 1 - VIN - 12.21V
    pin 2 - GND
    pin 3 - OUT - 9.09V

    All the voltages look good to me and match the datasheets for input and output.

    At first I thought IC302 VOUT was low, but the chip says AMS1117 2.5 which to me indicates 2.5V.

    If I intrepret the datasheet correctly for IC 501, LM25765, pin 5 with 0V indicates ON while 5V indicates OFF.

    On IC504, when I was probing, I had the black lead on pin 1 and it slipped and briefly touched pin 2 and I noticed the backlight came on while it was shorted. However, I don't know if there was a display or not because the panel was face front on the carpet.

    Originally posted by PlainBill
    An obvious next step would be to check the onboard voltage regulators. I count 7 of them.

    PlainBill

    Leave a comment:


  • el3ctroded
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Originally posted by retiredcaps
    - the cap I changed out took a lot of heat, scraping, struggles to get out and I think I damaged or removed the solder pads which explains why it looks so ugly. Solder doesn't stick to PCB very well. The front side logic picture shows the "old" cap in. It looks slightly bloated and I replaced it with a United Chemicon.
    The reason you had so much trouble is your soldering iron is likely not powerful enough to heat the part and power/gnd copper planes on the PCB, or there was no flux left in the solder, or both. The reason solder didn't want to stick to the board is the same reason: You were likely not getting the solder point hot enough, most likely due to a too-small wattage iron.

    I use this 100W iron and on occasion have to turn up the temperature to 900degF (it says max 850, but it goes higher): http://www.xytronic-usa.com/LF-1000_index.htm

    Edit: When using the temp so high, you have to be very careful not to damage the PCB or part(s)!
    Last edited by el3ctroded; 07-03-2010, 10:48 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • PlainBill
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Another trick I use is to hook up an old video game or other signal source with composite out to the composite inputs. Then I step through the inputs until I hear the sound out of the speakers.

    PlainBill

    Leave a comment:


  • PlainBill
    replied
    Re: Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Originally posted by retiredcaps
    I received a non working Daytek DCM-17WT (circa around 2002/2003). I'm not the original owner so I don't know the history. It is a hybrid LCD TV/computer monitor. The TV side has S-video and composite inputs. The "PC" side has a single VGA input.

    SETUP
    =====

    - known working VGA cable, 15 pin male to male
    - known working laptop with VGA output
    - known working AC power surger protector
    - laptop plugged into Daytek PC side with known working VGA connections
    - remote control has fresh known working batteries
    - known working DVD player and composite cable plugged into TV side

    SYMPTOMS
    ========

    - press power button and Daytek LED will turn green, but there is no picture at all. No flash of the screen, nothing. LED stays green.
    - pressing the OSD menu on the TV or remote shows nothing
    - pressing the source button on the TV or remote control does not display any picture
    - I cannot be sure what the "source" is because there is no OSD display or menu
    - if I remove the LVDS cable, the screen goes entirely white and stays that way which infers the inverter board and CCFLs are working okay
    - there is a slightly high pitched whine or squeal with the LVDS cable is plugged in. If I disconnect the LVDS cable, that sound is gone.


    MEASUREMENTS
    ============

    - external power supply DC12V 4.17A shows steady 12.22V DC with DMM
    - inverter board gets 12V DC with DMM
    - all fuses show 0.03 ohms with DMM
    - LVDS (from left to right) DC voltages are
    pin 1-4: 4.88V DC
    pin 5-8: 0.00V DC
    pin 9: 1.34V DC
    pin 10: 1.19V DC
    pin 11: 1.34V DC
    pin 12: 1.19V DC
    pin 13: 1.25V DC
    pin 14: 1.28V DC
    pin 15: 1.24V DC
    pin 16: 1.28V DC
    pin 17: 1.36V DC
    pin 18: 1.17V DC
    - I have no ESR meter, but all the caps look visibly okay except one that *might* have been slightly bloated which I changed. All the original caps are real "K" vent Rubycon YK 85C.
    - all front panel buttons test okay (no shorts)

    NOTES
    =====

    - the cap I changed out took a lot of heat, scraping, struggles to get out and I think I damaged or removed the solder pads which explains why it looks so ugly. Solder doesn't stick to PCB very well. The front side logic picture shows the "old" cap in. It looks slightly bloated and I replaced it with a United Chemicon.

    - I did test the monitor BEFORE I changed the one cap and I got almost the same voltage measurements on the LVDS.

    - I have reseated and cleaned all the connections and verified cable integrity with a DMM using the continuity test.

    - I think the problem lies somewhere on the logic board, possibly the pixelworks PW166B-10T chip. I suspect that for two reasons.

    First,it looks like it is the chip that processes both PC and TV side inputs. Since neither composite or PC work this might be the choke point.

    Second, it looks like this is a BGA implementation and there are numerous reported problems with this type of implementation.

    - Datasheet for PW166B is at

    http://www.eserviceinfo.com/download.php?fileid=24584

    NEXT?
    =====

    Since the PW166B is a BGA, I cannot easily verify it is working properly. I guess I can infer it is working or not by measuring the outputs and comparing it to the datasheet.

    So I'm looking for suggestions on how to proceed or test points.

    If the suggestion is to recap the logic board, I can, but I need to order some caps that fit. As you can see, some caps lie on their side to fit underneath the aluminum shield. And these are already Rubycon caps, albeit 2002/2003 circa.
    An obvious next step would be to check the onboard voltage regulators. I count 7 of them.

    PlainBill
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • retiredcaps
    started a topic Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    Daytek DCM-17WT no display

    I received a non working Daytek DCM-17WT (circa around 2002/2003). I'm not the original owner so I don't know the history. It is a hybrid LCD TV/computer monitor. The TV side has S-video and composite inputs. The "PC" side has a single VGA input.

    SETUP
    =====

    - known working VGA cable, 15 pin male to male
    - known working laptop with VGA output
    - known working AC power surger protector
    - laptop plugged into Daytek PC side with known working VGA connections
    - remote control has fresh known working batteries
    - known working DVD player and composite cable plugged into TV side

    SYMPTOMS
    ========

    - press power button and Daytek LED will turn green, but there is no picture at all. No flash of the screen, nothing. LED stays green.
    - pressing the OSD menu on the TV or remote shows nothing
    - pressing the source button on the TV or remote control does not display any picture
    - I cannot be sure what the "source" is because there is no OSD display or menu
    - if I remove the LVDS cable, the screen goes entirely white and stays that way which infers the inverter board and CCFLs are working okay
    - there is a slightly high pitched whine or squeal with the LVDS cable is plugged in. If I disconnect the LVDS cable, that sound is gone.


    MEASUREMENTS
    ============

    - external power supply DC12V 4.17A shows steady 12.22V DC with DMM
    - inverter board gets 12V DC with DMM
    - all fuses show 0.03 ohms with DMM
    - LVDS (from left to right) DC voltages are
    pin 1-4: 4.88V DC
    pin 5-8: 0.00V DC
    pin 9: 1.34V DC
    pin 10: 1.19V DC
    pin 11: 1.34V DC
    pin 12: 1.19V DC
    pin 13: 1.25V DC
    pin 14: 1.28V DC
    pin 15: 1.24V DC
    pin 16: 1.28V DC
    pin 17: 1.36V DC
    pin 18: 1.17V DC
    - I have no ESR meter, but all the caps look visibly okay except one that *might* have been slightly bloated which I changed. All the original caps are real "K" vent Rubycon YK 85C.
    - all front panel buttons test okay (no shorts)

    NOTES
    =====

    - the cap I changed out took a lot of heat, scraping, struggles to get out and I think I damaged or removed the solder pads which explains why it looks so ugly. Solder doesn't stick to PCB very well. The front side logic picture shows the "old" cap in. It looks slightly bloated and I replaced it with a United Chemicon.

    - I did test the monitor BEFORE I changed the one cap and I got almost the same voltage measurements on the LVDS.

    - I have reseated and cleaned all the connections and verified cable integrity with a DMM using the continuity test.

    - I think the problem lies somewhere on the logic board, possibly the pixelworks PW166B-10T chip. I suspect that for two reasons.

    First,it looks like it is the chip that processes both PC and TV side inputs. Since neither composite or PC work this might be the choke point.

    Second, it looks like this is a BGA implementation and there are numerous reported problems with this type of implementation.

    - Datasheet for PW166B is at

    http://www.eserviceinfo.com/download.php?fileid=24584

    NEXT?
    =====

    Since the PW166B is a BGA, I cannot easily verify it is working properly. I guess I can infer it is working or not by measuring the outputs and comparing it to the datasheet.

    So I'm looking for suggestions on how to proceed or test points.

    If the suggestion is to recap the logic board, I can, but I need to order some caps that fit. As you can see, some caps lie on their side to fit underneath the aluminum shield. And these are already Rubycon caps, albeit 2002/2003 circa.
    Attached Files
    Last edited by retiredcaps; 07-03-2010, 05:04 PM.
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