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[email protected] bill@love.ranch is offline
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Default LCD Desktop Monitor Fading to White, then Black

On Sun, 2 May 2010 08:21:04 +0100, "N_Cook" wrote:

saber850 wrote in message
...
Hi,

My LCD desktop monitor has been exhibiting a problem for over 1 year.
It is out of warranty and I would like to fix it.

The problem is that the monitor displays the picture, and then
gradually fades to white, and then gradually fades to black.

The monitor does not exhibit the problem all the time. It comes and
goes. I do not have a procedure which triggers the problem; it seems
to be random. Sometimes it will behave this way for only a few
minutes, while other times it will behave like this for weeks.

I do not do anything to trigger the problem, other than have the
monitor powered on.

I have two of these monitors. I bought both monitors at the same time.
Both monitors are connected to the same video card (nVidia) via a DVI
connection. Only one of the monitors exhibits the problem--the other
continues to function properly. When the monitor exhibits the
problem, I can swap the DVI cables and the other monitor continues to
function properly. So I do not believe the problem is my video card or
computer.

I do not know of a method to get the monitor out of this problem
state. I've tried cycling the power to the monitor, and I've tried
rebooting the computer. Neither method fixes the problem. The only
thing I can do is wait for it to fix itself. But eventually, it
malfunctions again.

A video of the problem occurring is available he
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W7YpFZVRjcE


Best regards,
Nick



Can you observe discrete jumps in the fade, ie stepped.
Is it a backlight problem? if so perhaps find the brightness control line to
the inverter and break there and add your own subcircuit perhaps. First
monitor that line as maybe a fault inside the inverter chip



I don't think it is a backlight issue
My bet is a circuit problem with something common to all colors.

The brightness increases to max, then it goes negative to black. Then
it pops back to normal.

A lot of monitors have everything wrapped up in one chip.
Some ICs may drive the monitor directly.

Look for unstable supply voltage.
If the voltage is going on/off abruptly but has a big cap on the line
that would explain it.