CRT TV Power Problem
CRT TV Power Problem
way.
* The prongs do not fit snugly into older worn outlets. This can usually
be remedied by using a pointed tool like an awl or utility knife to spread
apart the pair of leaves often used to form each prong of the plug. If
the prongs are made of solid metal, it may be possible to spread them
apart - widen the space between them. Alternatively, get a 3 to 2 prong
adapter just to use as an intermediate connector. Spread the leaves of
its prongs. However, a new outlet is best.
* Bad connections on the mainboard. As you flex the cord, it is also
stressing
the attachment to the mainboard and affecting some marginal solder joints.
It is important to deal with these symptoms as soon as possible as erratic
power cycling can lead to much more serious and expensive problems down the
road.
A blown fuse is a very common type of fault due to poor design very often
triggered by power surges due to outages or lightning storms. However,
the most likely parts to short are easily tested, usually in-circuit, with
an ohmmeter and then easily removed to confirm.
If you find the problem and repair it yourself, the cost is likely to
be under $25.
However,
connected to the phone lines. Better designs include filtering and surge
suppression components built in. With a near-miss, the only thing that may
happen is for the internal fuse to blow or for the microcontroller to go
bonkers and just require power cycling. There is no possible protection
against a direct strike. However, devices with power switches that totally
break the line connection are more robust since it takes much more voltage
to jump the gap in the switch than to fry electronic parts. Monitors and
TVs may also have their CRTs magnetized due to the electromagnetic fields
associated with a lightning strike - similar but on a smaller scale to
the EMP of a nuclear detonation.
Was the TV operating or on standby at the time? If it was switched
off using an actual power switch (not a logic pushbutton or the remote
control), then either a component in front of the switch has blown, the
surge was enough to jump the gap between the switch contacts, or it was
just a coincidence (yeh, right).
If the TV was operating or on standby or has no actual power switch, then
a number of parts could be fried.
TVs usually have their own internal surge protection devices like MOVs (Metal
Oxide Varistors) after the fuse. So it is possible that all that is wrong is
that the line fuse has blown. Remove the cover (unplug it first!) and start
at the line cord. If you find a blown fuse, remove it and measure across
the in-board side of fuse holder and the other (should be the neutral) side
of the line. The ohmmeter reading should be fairly high - well certainly not
less than 100 ohms - in at least one direction. You may need to unplug the
degaussing coil to get a reasonable reading as its resistance may be 25 or 30
ohms. If the reading is really low, there are other problems. If the
resistance checks out, replace the fuse and try powering the TV. There will
be 3 possibilities:
1. It will work fine, problem solved.
2. It will immediately blow the fuse. This means there is at least one
component shorted - possibilities include an MOV, line rectifiers, main
filter cap, regulator transistor, horizontal output transistor, etc. You
will need to check with your ohmmeter for shorted semiconductors. Remove
any that are suspect and see of the fuse now survives (use the series
light bulb to cut your losses - see the section: "The series light bulb
trick".
3. It will not work properly or appear dead. This could mean there are
open fusable resistors other defective parts in the power supply or
elsewhere. In this case further testing will be required and at some
point you may need the schematic.
If the reading is very low or the fuse blows again, see the section:
"TV blows fuse".
The click probably means that the power relay is working, though there could
be bad contacts.
Since the fuse doesn't blow now (you did replace it with one of the same
ratings, right?), you need to check for:
* Other blown fuses - occasionally there are more than one in a TV.
Replace with one of exactly the same ratings.
* Open fusable resistors. These sometimes blow at the same time or in
place of the fuses. They are usually low values like 2 ohms and are in
big rectangular ceramic power resistor cases or smaller blue or gray
colored cylindrical power resistors. They are supposed to protect
expensive parts like the HOT but often blow at the same time.
If any of these are bad, they will need to be replaced with flameproof
resistors of the same ratings (though you can substitute an ordinary
resistor for testing purposes). Before applying power, check: Rectifier
diodes, horizontal output transistor, regulator pass or chopper transistor
(if present), and main filter capacitor for shorts.
An initial test with an ohmmeter can be done while in-circuit. The
resistance across each diode and the collector to emitter of the
transistors should be relatively high - a few hundred ohms at lest in at least one direction (in-circuit). If there is a question, unsolder
one side of each diode and check - should be in the Megohms or higher in
one direction. Removed from the circuit, the collector-emitter resistance
should be very high in one direction at least. Depending on the type,
the base-emitter resistance may be high in one direction or around 50 ohms.
If any reading on a semiconductor device is under 10 ohms - then the device
most likely bad. Assuming that you do not have a schematic, you should
be able to locate the rectifiers near where the line cord is connected and
trace the circuit. The transistors will be either in a TO3 large metal can
or a TOP3 plastic package - on heat sinks. The filter capacitor should
eventually measure high in one direction (it will take a while to charge
from your ohmmeter).
It could still be failing at full voltage, however.
If you find one bad part, still check everything else as more than one part
may fail and just replacing one may cause it to fail again.
Assuming everything here checks out, clip a voltmeter set on its 500 V scale
or higher across the horizontal output transistor and turn the power on.
Warning - never measure this point if the horizontal deflection is operating.
it is ok now since the set is dead. If the voltage here is 100-150, then
there is a problem in the drive to the horizontal output circuit. If it
is low or 0, then there are still problems in the power supply or with the
winding on the flyback transformer.
Other possible problems: bad hybrid voltage regulator, bad startup circuit,
bad standby power supply (dried up filter capacitor, etc.) bad relay contacts
as mentioned above. However, these probably would not have blown the fuse in
the first place so are less likely.
1. Use an ohmmeter to test the HOT for shorts. If it is bad, look for
open fusable resistors or other fuses you did not catch.
2. Assuming it is good, measure the voltage on the collector-emitter
of the HOT (this is safe if there is no deflection). You should see
the B+ - probably between 100 and 150 V.
3. If there is no voltage, you have a low voltage power supply problem
and/or you have not found all the bad/open parts.
4. If there is voltage and no deflection (no high pitched whine and no
HV), you probably have a startup problem - all TVs need some kind of
circuit to kick start the horizontal deflection until the auxiliary
power outputs of the flyback are available. Some Zeniths use a simple
multivibrator for this - a couple of transistors. Others power the
horizontal osc. IC from a special line-derived voltage. The multivibrator
type are sometimes designed to fail if someone keeps turning the set on
and off (like kids playing) since the power rating is inadequate.
Test the transistors if it is that type with an ohmmeter. If one is
shorted, you have a problem. The usual way a TV service person would
test for startup problems is to inject a signal to the base of the HOT
of about 15.75 KHz. If the TV then starts and runs once this signal
is removed, the diagnosis is confirmed. This is risky - you can blow
things up if not careful (including yourself).
If you hear the high pitched whine of the deflection and/or feel some static
on the scree, confirm that the horizontal deflection and high voltage are
working by adjusting the SCREEN control (probably on the flyback). If you can
get a raster then your problem is probably in the video or chroma
circuits, not the deflection or high voltage.
3. Other type of circuit which operates off of the line which provides
some kind of drive to the HOT.
The startup circuit may operate off of the standby power supply or
voltage derived from non-isolated input. Be careful - of course, use
an isolation transformer whenever working on TVs and especially for power
supply problems.
Note that one common way of verifying that this is a startup problem is
to inject a 15 KHz signal directly into the HOT base or driver circuit
(just for a second or two). If the TV then starts up and continues to run,
you know that it is a startup problem.
Caution: be careful if you do this. The HOT circuit may be line-connected
and it is possible to destroy the HOT and related components if this is not
done properly. I once managed to kill not only the HOT but the chopper
transistor as well while working in this area. An expensive lesson.
I have also seen startup circuits that were designed to fail. Turning
the TV on and off multiple times would exceed the power ratings of the
components in the startup circuit. Some Zenith models have this 'feature'.
When this situation exists, it could be that the circuit is not providing
the proper drive or that due to some other circuit condition, the drive
is not always sufficient to get the secondary supplies going to the point
that the normal circuits take over.
I would still check for bad connections - prod the circuit board with an
insulated stick when the problem reoccurs.