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[email protected] March 12th 06 10:49 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
I have a SONY plasma TV. It's developed a problem - a thin horizontal
black line that goes from one end of the screen to the other (about 4"
from the top of the screen). I've also noticed that several other
people have reported the same problem. I've even seen folks selling
their plasma TVs on ebay with this same problem.

The bad news is that I am told by service technicians that the problem
is a bad display driver board, which is part of the display panel.
Cost to repair: $2,000.

My gut tells me it's a bad chip somewhere. I shouldn't have to replace
the entire display. Correction - I shouldn't have to throw a $4,000 tv
in the garbage after three years.

Does anyone know how to really fix this problem. My model is
KZ-32TS1U.

Thanks,
AABob


[email protected] March 12th 06 10:51 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
The entire display with the ic circuits that are an integral part of
the glass display all needs to be replaced. That is how you fix the
problem.


James Sweet March 12th 06 11:31 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
wrote:
I have a SONY plasma TV. It's developed a problem - a thin horizontal
black line that goes from one end of the screen to the other (about 4"
from the top of the screen). I've also noticed that several other
people have reported the same problem. I've even seen folks selling
their plasma TVs on ebay with this same problem.

The bad news is that I am told by service technicians that the problem
is a bad display driver board, which is part of the display panel.
Cost to repair: $2,000.

My gut tells me it's a bad chip somewhere. I shouldn't have to replace
the entire display. Correction - I shouldn't have to throw a $4,000 tv
in the garbage after three years.

Does anyone know how to really fix this problem. My model is
KZ-32TS1U.

Thanks,
AABob



Unfortunately the chips are bonded onto the ribbons which are bonded to
the panel so the fix is indeed to replace the panel. Sucks I know, it's
the primary reason why I'm too paranoid to buy a plasma TV.

Ian Stirling March 12th 06 11:32 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
wrote:
I have a SONY plasma TV. It's developed a problem - a thin horizontal
black line that goes from one end of the screen to the other (about 4"
from the top of the screen). I've also noticed that several other
people have reported the same problem. I've even seen folks selling
their plasma TVs on ebay with this same problem.

The bad news is that I am told by service technicians that the problem
is a bad display driver board, which is part of the display panel.
Cost to repair: $2,000.

My gut tells me it's a bad chip somewhere. I shouldn't have to replace
the entire display. Correction - I shouldn't have to throw a $4,000 tv
in the garbage after three years.


It is not inherently impossible to fix.
I'd estimate you could probably set up a station to try to fix it for
well under 10 million dollars.

James Sweet March 13th 06 12:01 AM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
Ian Stirling wrote:
wrote:

I have a SONY plasma TV. It's developed a problem - a thin horizontal
black line that goes from one end of the screen to the other (about 4"
from the top of the screen). I've also noticed that several other
people have reported the same problem. I've even seen folks selling
their plasma TVs on ebay with this same problem.

The bad news is that I am told by service technicians that the problem
is a bad display driver board, which is part of the display panel.
Cost to repair: $2,000.

My gut tells me it's a bad chip somewhere. I shouldn't have to replace
the entire display. Correction - I shouldn't have to throw a $4,000 tv
in the garbage after three years.



It is not inherently impossible to fix.
I'd estimate you could probably set up a station to try to fix it for
well under 10 million dollars.



If you could find an identical panel with a broken glass it might
technically be possible to transfer the driver from one panel to the
other, but with the ones I've seen there would be absolutely no way in
hell of doing this at home. It really is a shame, I don't understand why
they bond them rather than just using some sort of connector.

Jason D. March 13th 06 02:45 AM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
On 12 Mar 2006 19:19:06 -0500, Sam Goldwasser
wrote:

James Sweet writes:

Ian Stirling wrote:
wrote:


We had a Samsung 40" LCD (2005 models) come in and they said to
replace the lamp inverter, replace LCD ($1500). The silly lamp
inverter boards (2x) aren't part of LCD and can be unplugged and
unscrewed.

I do not see the reason for anything over 1500 or more to build in
throw away, they are expensive and customers will be mad to hear like
that because of one part is intergal of the LCD or Plamsa (drivers ICs
(make it solderable on gull-wing ICs) on a strip of board assembly.
SILLY!!

This should be repairable and we need that kind of lifehood to able to
keep doing this on LCDs and such. In old days these LCDs had soldered
on ICs on back of LCD.

Cheers, Wizard

kip March 13th 06 02:52 AM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
I guess you should have done some resarch into
Plasma before you purchased the Garbage.

wrote in message
ups.com...
I have a SONY plasma TV. It's developed a problem - a thin horizontal
black line that goes from one end of the screen to the other (about 4"
from the top of the screen). I've also noticed that several other
people have reported the same problem. I've even seen folks selling
their plasma TVs on ebay with this same problem.

The bad news is that I am told by service technicians that the problem
is a bad display driver board, which is part of the display panel.
Cost to repair: $2,000.

My gut tells me it's a bad chip somewhere. I shouldn't have to replace
the entire display. Correction - I shouldn't have to throw a $4,000 tv
in the garbage after three years.

Does anyone know how to really fix this problem. My model is
KZ-32TS1U.

Thanks,
AABob




[email protected] March 13th 06 03:43 AM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
You're absolutely right. And I am mad! Does anyone have any experience
with SONY management? Can I complain to someone there about their
$4,000 disposable TVs?


kip March 13th 06 02:01 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
Go to the top and get to speak to a
General not a Private and BE nice.
It will work for you.





wrote in message
ups.com...
You're absolutely right. And I am mad! Does anyone have any experience
with SONY management? Can I complain to someone there about their
$4,000 disposable TVs?




Mike Berger March 13th 06 05:03 PM

The Famous Plasma Black Line
 
It drastically decreased the size and weight of the support
electronics, and increased the reliability. Imagine how many
tiny wires you'd have to connect to the external electronics.
A 1280x720 pixel panel. You'd need a reliable, inexpensive
921600 conductor connector (assuming no grounds or other
control signals).

James Sweet wrote:

If you could find an identical panel with a broken glass it might
technically be possible to transfer the driver from one panel to the
other, but with the ones I've seen there would be absolutely no way in
hell of doing this at home. It really is a shame, I don't understand why
they bond them rather than just using some sort of connector.



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