View Single Post
  #8   Report Post  
Posted to sci.electronics.repair
lsmartino lsmartino is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 161
Default Mitsubishi TV vertical hold

On 9 mayo, 11:15, Boris Mohar wrote:
On Sat, 8 May 2010 16:53:58 -0700 (PDT), wrote:
On May 8, 11:43*am, "Lance Dyer" wrote:
Bad caps


"William Sommerwerck" wrote in message


...


On modern sets, vertical sync is generated from the horizontal

sync. The
chip that handles sync separation is a likely possibility.


It's also possible the bias on the vertical output stage is

drifting.


I second the bad caps suggestion. I put the odds at 98% dried out
cap(s). The 'warm up' description is exactly how 'lytics behave. they
always measure better after unsoldering. I just changed 72 caps in
Sony digital Betacam machines this morning.


The 'vertical from horizontal' description is pretty poor. Vertical
like horizontal is part of the composite sync. First sync is recovered
from the video and then processed to extract the H and V components.
This can be done with counters and PLLs or simple RC networks.




It turned out to be a 40pin proprietary chip that decided to fail. I found
this out by waning up the whole board with hot air until vertical sync
stabilized. *Selective application of cold spray pinpointed the chip. *I wish
that it was the caps. *Not having the replacement handy I glued a jacket of
thermal insulation over the chip hoping that it warms up sooner. *Seems
shorten the "warmup" time.

--
Boris- Ocultar texto de la cita -

- Mostrar texto de la cita -


I donīt know, but I canīt remember a case where a semiconductor
improved after warming. Usually is in reverse: a damaged semiconductor
will work while itīs cold and start to fail as soon as it heats. If
you see any electrolytic capacitors in the vecinity of the chip,
replace them first. Electrolitycs are cheap and easy to replace, and
probaly will solve the fault.