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Yea ! Right.


"Charlie Bress" wrote in message
...
Thanks for the tips.
I had tried some searches that were not productive, but I hadn't tried
Google groups.
I have a fair amount of experience with TV repair and I am well aware of
the shock hazards.
My biggest problem is that I haven't had much need to do component level
repair since everything went solid state.
That dates me, but the basics stay the same. It is the implementations
that have changed.

Charlie

"sofie" wrote in message
...
Charlie Bress:
When you are not too busy filming CSI Las Vegas you should do a google
groups archive search for "Toshiba vertical"..... you will find dozens
of
good hits that will most likely pinpoint the problem to dry, leaky, high
ESR, or otherwise faulty electrolytics in the vertical deflection
circuitry..... this has been a very frequent repair topic on this
newsgroup for many years..... so there will be lots of archived posts to
read and to learn from. Also you should go to the website for this
newsgroup at
http://www.repairfaq.org/
there with some searching you will find specific repair hints and
important
safety information so if you attempt to repair the television yourself
you
can avoid the dangerous and lethal electrical shock hazards.... note
that
these hazards can still be present even when the television is
disconnected
from the AC power.... be careful.
If after reading through the repairfaq and other google archive
information
you are still not certain how to proceed then you should at the very
least
TAKE it to a repair shop for a repair cost estimate so you can make an
intelligent repair decision with facts. This is usually NOT an
expensive
repair..... a set of this size may be worth the repair price as long as
the
CRT still has good emissions.
--
Best Regards,
Daniel Sofie
Electronics Supply & Repair
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"Charlie Bress" wrote in message
...
My son's future father-in-law just gave him a Toshiba CF3266a set that
had
been replaced. This old TV has been losing vertical amplitude and
adjustments were no longer able to restore the size. I have not seen
this
set yet , but have been invited to try fixing it.

My understanding is that picture shrink had been from both top and
bottom.
I am betting it is a cap or two that have degraded. This box is a 1991
build. Are there any particular suspects in the vertical amp section.

I am also hoping that the suspects are PTH and not surface mounted. I
have
no way of checking caps other than a VOM to check for leakage and plain

old
substitution if I can find suitable replacements.

I am well aware of HV concerns and will keep my fingers away from places
that bite.

Charlie