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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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I have a Miro C2085 20" CRT monitor that was working until I gave it to
my brother and he took it away. Now the fuse is blown within the power supply. When I replaced the fuse and turned on the monitor, the new fuse lit up instantly like a flash bulb as it also blew. There is definitely a short-circuit somewhere. The only way I can imagine that it came about was that monitor may have taken a hard bounce when my brother transported it in the back of his minivan. Yet I see no obvious damage to the surrounding external casing. Other than this, I have no explanation for why the monitor was once working but is no longer doing so. I don't remember what kind of CRT this was but the power supply board is a Sony part. Any and all advice will be welcomed. Thanks in advance. |
#2
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#3
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My brother's house uses the same voltage as mine 120v. I'm in NewYork
while he's in New Jersey but both are in the U.S. with the same line voltage. Anyway, he returned the monitor to me where I replaced the fuse only to see it blow again, so that's not at issue here. I did find a loose screw inside that I did remove. There was one missing for mounting the metal shielding just inside the plastic shell so that accounts for this. I had hoped that this would explain the short-circuit but I ended up blowing yet another fuse anyway. This monitor is much too large to be able to be shaken with ease so as to listen for any loose items rattling. I DID stand it up on different ends to see if this MIGHT happen but no. This thing is built pretty solid. BTW, the monitor uses a Sony Trinitron tube Gerard Bok wrote: On 31 Jan 2006 21:56:29 -0800, wrote: I have a Miro C2085 20" CRT monitor that was working until I gave it to my brother and he took it away. Now the fuse is blown within the power supply. When I replaced the fuse and turned on the monitor, the new fuse lit up instantly like a flash bulb as it also blew. There is definitely a short-circuit somewhere. The only way I can imagine that it came about was that monitor may have taken a hard bounce when my brother transported it in the back of his minivan. Yet I see no obvious damage to the surrounding external casing. Other than this, I have no explanation for why the monitor was once working but is no longer doing so. Where does your brother keep his coins ? Any chance that your brother's premises are wired to a different voltage ? -- Kind regards, Gerard Bok |
#5
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wrote:
My brother's house uses the same voltage as mine 120v. I'm in NewYork while he's in New Jersey but both are in the U.S. with the same line voltage. Anyway, he returned the monitor to me where I replaced the fuse only to see it blow again, so that's not at issue here. I did find a loose screw inside that I did remove. There was one missing for mounting the metal shielding just inside the plastic shell so that accounts for this. I had hoped that this would explain the short-circuit but I ended up blowing yet another fuse anyway. This monitor is much too large to be able to be shaken with ease so as to listen for any loose items rattling. I DID stand it up on different ends to see if this MIGHT happen but no. This thing is built pretty solid. BTW, the monitor uses a Sony Trinitron tube Gerard Bok wrote: On 31 Jan 2006 21:56:29 -0800, wrote: I have a Miro C2085 20" CRT monitor that was working until I gave it to my brother and he took it away. Now the fuse is blown within the power supply. When I replaced the fuse and turned on the monitor, the new fuse lit up instantly like a flash bulb as it also blew. There is definitely a short-circuit somewhere. The only way I can imagine that it came about was that monitor may have taken a hard bounce when my brother transported it in the back of his minivan. Yet I see no obvious damage to the surrounding external casing. Other than this, I have no explanation for why the monitor was once working but is no longer doing so. The screw probably shorted something and blew a part in the power supply. If the fuse blows immediately I'd start by checking the rectifier. |
#6
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It's quite possible this screw may have shorted something out within
the power supply but I think that it is unlikely. The power supply has it's own metal cage and, when I disconnect all of the cables, can be completely removed from the monitor. Also, its PC board is positioned in a vertical orientation when mounted within the monitor while this is normally standing. The screw wasn't likely touching inside there. The scarier possibility is that it shorted out something near the flyback transformer. Now that I think about it, disconnecting the cables will isolate the power supply from the rest of the monitor. This should allow me to see if the power supply is still working properly by itself. Or at least not blow another fuse. What risk would I take for creating further damage to the monitor if I were to play with this? There are four connectors to the power supply. Five, if you include the AC power cord. Two are for ribbon cables which are most likely for low-voltage stuff such as logic chips. The other two are for heavier guage wiring obviously for high-voltage stuff. Of these, one is a two-pin connector while the other is a four-pin. One of these have to be for the monitor on/off switch. Which of these two? I'm not sure. My first guess would be the two-pin connector but the on/off switch could be a double-pole switch used to completely isolate the monitor electrically while turned off. James Sweet wrote: wrote: My brother's house uses the same voltage as mine 120v. I'm in NewYork while he's in New Jersey but both are in the U.S. with the same line voltage. Anyway, he returned the monitor to me where I replaced the fuse only to see it blow again, so that's not at issue here. I did find a loose screw inside that I did remove. There was one missing for mounting the metal shielding just inside the plastic shell so that accounts for this. I had hoped that this would explain the short-circuit but I ended up blowing yet another fuse anyway. This monitor is much too large to be able to be shaken with ease so as to listen for any loose items rattling. I DID stand it up on different ends to see if this MIGHT happen but no. This thing is built pretty solid. BTW, the monitor uses a Sony Trinitron tube Gerard Bok wrote: On 31 Jan 2006 21:56:29 -0800, wrote: I have a Miro C2085 20" CRT monitor that was working until I gave it to my brother and he took it away. Now the fuse is blown within the power supply. When I replaced the fuse and turned on the monitor, the new fuse lit up instantly like a flash bulb as it also blew. There is definitely a short-circuit somewhere. The only way I can imagine that it came about was that monitor may have taken a hard bounce when my brother transported it in the back of his minivan. Yet I see no obvious damage to the surrounding external casing. Other than this, I have no explanation for why the monitor was once working but is no longer doing so. The screw probably shorted something and blew a part in the power supply. If the fuse blows immediately I'd start by checking the rectifier. |
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