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Broken LCD HDTV

My 5 months old LCD HDTV (a 19" Philips model with 1440x900 16:10 resolution
and PC input, mostly used for computer stuff) broke down yesterday. It is
not completely dead. It dies within about 10 to 20 minutes of being powered
on. By "dies" it no longer functions and the screen goes dark but the back
light illumination appears to still be on. It won't turn off by remote or
the buttons located on the top edge. I have to unplug the AC power.

I believe the problem is a thermal condition likely in the PSU.

This all started when I started watching WTOV-DT channel 9.3 weather radar.
Someone online mentioned they saw the new channel so I checked it out. As
some storms happened to be coming by the past few days, I left the TV on
all night a couple times. Normally I have left it on with the PC, which
would go into video power saver made shutting off most display functions.
But with the radar it remained running constantly. I neglected to think
about it. I was more concerned about the speed of getting it turned on if
I wanted to watch in the middle of the night as that takes almost a minute
for it to "boot up" from cold-off.

I did notice once that the air rising from the top side vents was particularly
hot. I shut it off at that time. But later when I had it back on again, it
eventually just up and died on its own, like the CPU had frozen.

I have allowed it to spend much time cooling down (hours in a cool room) and
tried it again. The longest it will now run is about 20 minutes. When it
actually dies (I finally watched it for long enough to see it do this) it
does some kind of pixelation thing that is rather different than digital TV
pixelation. It does this even for analog TV channels and PC input. It then
blanks out and resets a couple times, coming back on. Finally it stays off.

It's unplugged for now and I won't use it in case such usage could cause more
permanent damage.

I'm contemplating opening it up and trying to see if I can figure out what
might be wrong inside. Maybe it has gotten too dusty inside and is not
letting heat out fast enough and its a simple thermal trip. That pixelation
on the screen does seem to me that the CPU or other digital circuitry is
getting a low or incomplete voltage situation.

I've never opened up an LCD flat screen TV before. Are there any general
suggestions on how to handle doing this to avoid damaging it in other ways?

Has anyone here ever opened up one of these before?

I'll only do this if I find it's not under warranty. I don't normally buy
those extended warranty plans for something in this price range, and this
event won't change that (I would for something in the $2000 price range).
But maybe the factory warranty still covers it. I'll have to dig the box
with all its paperwork out of the garage to see. Most things I buy don't
break for years. This is the first thing to die that soon in at about 10
years (a 5GB HD died a month after I bought it long long ago).
 
P

Palindrome

Jan 1, 1970
0
My 5 months old LCD HDTV (a 19" Philips model with 1440x900 16:10 resolution
and PC input, mostly used for computer stuff) broke down yesterday. It is
not completely dead. It dies within about 10 to 20 minutes of being powered
on. By "dies" it no longer functions and the screen goes dark but the back
light illumination appears to still be on. It won't turn off by remote or
the buttons located on the top edge. I have to unplug the AC power.

I believe the problem is a thermal condition likely in the PSU.

This all started when I started watching WTOV-DT channel 9.3 weather radar.
Someone online mentioned they saw the new channel so I checked it out. As
some storms happened to be coming by the past few days, I left the TV on
all night a couple times. Normally I have left it on with the PC, which
would go into video power saver made shutting off most display functions.
But with the radar it remained running constantly. I neglected to think
about it. I was more concerned about the speed of getting it turned on if
I wanted to watch in the middle of the night as that takes almost a minute
for it to "boot up" from cold-off.

I did notice once that the air rising from the top side vents was particularly
hot. I shut it off at that time. But later when I had it back on again, it
eventually just up and died on its own, like the CPU had frozen.

I have allowed it to spend much time cooling down (hours in a cool room) and
tried it again. The longest it will now run is about 20 minutes. When it
actually dies (I finally watched it for long enough to see it do this) it
does some kind of pixelation thing that is rather different than digital TV
pixelation. It does this even for analog TV channels and PC input. It then
blanks out and resets a couple times, coming back on. Finally it stays off.

It's unplugged for now and I won't use it in case such usage could cause more
permanent damage.

I'm contemplating opening it up and trying to see if I can figure out what
might be wrong inside. Maybe it has gotten too dusty inside and is not
letting heat out fast enough and its a simple thermal trip. That pixelation
on the screen does seem to me that the CPU or other digital circuitry is
getting a low or incomplete voltage situation.

I've never opened up an LCD flat screen TV before. Are there any general
suggestions on how to handle doing this to avoid damaging it in other ways?

Has anyone here ever opened up one of these before?

I'll only do this if I find it's not under warranty. I don't normally buy
those extended warranty plans for something in this price range, and this
event won't change that (I would for something in the $2000 price range).
But maybe the factory warranty still covers it. I'll have to dig the box
with all its paperwork out of the garage to see. Most things I buy don't
break for years. This is the first thing to die that soon in at about 10
years (a 5GB HD died a month after I bought it long long ago).

If it is only 5 months old, surely it is still very much under warranty?
In the UK it would have 1 year's warranty as a minimum, from the
supplier. Plus any additional warranty that the manufacturer might have
provided.

It sounds like permanent thermal damage.

It may be that some thermal bonding material has become degraded and
could be simply replaced - but that it a long shot.

You could opening it up and seeing if blowing in large quantities of
cold air made a difference. Then localising the air flow to pin down
which area, and finally which component, is causing the problem. It may
be that a better heatsink, possibly with a fan, may do the job, even if
the component itself is now less thermally efficient than it once was..
 
D

Dean Hoffman

Jan 1, 1970
0
My 5 months old LCD HDTV (a 19" Philips model with 1440x900 16:10 resolution
and PC input, mostly used for computer stuff) broke down yesterday. It is
not completely dead. It dies within about 10 to 20 minutes of being powered
on. By "dies" it no longer functions and the screen goes dark but the back
light illumination appears to still be on. It won't turn off by remote or
the buttons located on the top edge. I have to unplug the AC power.

I believe the problem is a thermal condition likely in the PSU.

Cut rest.

This doesn't answer your question but there might be some guidance
here: http://tinyurl.com/yuj27l
Some hard core electronics users are here. It doesn't sound like any
are EEs or fixers but maybe there is help there anyhow. There is a
search feature near the top.

Dean
 
| If it is only 5 months old, surely it is still very much under warranty?
| In the UK it would have 1 year's warranty as a minimum, from the
| supplier. Plus any additional warranty that the manufacturer might have
| provided.
|
| It sounds like permanent thermal damage.
|
| It may be that some thermal bonding material has become degraded and
| could be simply replaced - but that it a long shot.
|
| You could opening it up and seeing if blowing in large quantities of
| cold air made a difference. Then localising the air flow to pin down
| which area, and finally which component, is causing the problem. It may
| be that a better heatsink, possibly with a fan, may do the job, even if
| the component itself is now less thermally efficient than it once was..

It does appear to have a 1 year warranty. Now I need to find my receipt
to prove purchase date. I have receipt piles in several places.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
My 5 months old LCD HDTV (a 19" Philips model with 1440x900 16:10 resolution
and PC input, mostly used for computer stuff) broke down yesterday. It is
not completely dead. It dies within about 10 to 20 minutes of being powered
on. By "dies" it no longer functions and the screen goes dark but the back
light illumination appears to still be on. It won't turn off by remote or
the buttons located on the top edge. I have to unplug the AC power.


If you can't warranty exchange, try posting on sci.electronics.repair,
that's where the techs hang out. I would get out the freeze spray and a
hair dryer and start poking around. Wouldn't hurt to check all the power
supply rails before and after the fault condition as well. I've run into
cases where a bad optocoupler would allow the voltage to slowly rise as
the device warmed up, took forever to track down because the symptoms
pointed to something else.
 
S

Stephen B.

Jan 1, 1970
0
| If it is only 5 months old, surely it is still very much under
warranty?
| In the UK it would have 1 year's warranty as a minimum, from the
| supplier. Plus any additional warranty that the manufacturer might
have
| provided.
|
| It sounds like permanent thermal damage.
|
| It may be that some thermal bonding material has become degraded
and
| could be simply replaced - but that it a long shot.
|
| You could opening it up and seeing if blowing in large quantities
of
| cold air made a difference. Then localising the air flow to pin
down
| which area, and finally which component, is causing the problem.
It may
| be that a better heatsink, possibly with a fan, may do the job,
even if
| the component itself is now less thermally efficient than it once
was..

It does appear to have a 1 year warranty. Now I need to find my
receipt
to prove purchase date. I have receipt piles in several places.

If you don't find the recipt check for the date code. Chances are it
was MADE less than a year ago.
 
| |>
|> | If it is only 5 months old, surely it is still very much under
|> warranty?
|> | In the UK it would have 1 year's warranty as a minimum, from the
|> | supplier. Plus any additional warranty that the manufacturer might
|> have
|> | provided.
|> |
|> | It sounds like permanent thermal damage.
|> |
|> | It may be that some thermal bonding material has become degraded
|> and
|> | could be simply replaced - but that it a long shot.
|> |
|> | You could opening it up and seeing if blowing in large quantities
|> of
|> | cold air made a difference. Then localising the air flow to pin
|> down
|> | which area, and finally which component, is causing the problem.
|> It may
|> | be that a better heatsink, possibly with a fan, may do the job,
|> even if
|> | the component itself is now less thermally efficient than it once
|> was..
|>
|> It does appear to have a 1 year warranty. Now I need to find my
|> receipt
|> to prove purchase date. I have receipt piles in several places.
|>
|
| If you don't find the recipt check for the date code. Chances are it
| was MADE less than a year ago.

Good point! I'll check for that.
 
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