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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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Steve wrote:
On Sun, 27 Jul 2008 23:29:55 GMT, jordo wrote: Franc Zabkar wrote: On Fri, 25 Jul 2008 00:00:03 GMT, jordo put finger to keyboard and composed: I have a JVC rear projection tv that I bought second hand a little over a year ago. It works fine except for the HDMI input. When I plug it into my cable box and switch to the digital input, it can't detect anything (and says it's gonna turn off in 9 minutes if nothing is connected before then ![]() doesn't detect a connection, but the computer recognizes the tv for the model number that it is. To recognise the TV, the computer only needs to be able to read the TV's EDID EEPROM via the DDC pins in the cable (pins 6,7,14,15): http://pinouts.ru/VideoCables/hdmi_d...e_pinout.shtml I have managed to read a powered-down monitor's EDID EEPROM using my device programmer. I made a VGA DB15-to-DIP8 adapter cable and told the programmer that it was connected to an Atmel AT24C21 serial EEPROM which has a "DDC1/ DDC2 Interface Compliant for Monitor Identification". You can find the EDID in the registry at the following key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Enum\MONITOR If you export that key to a .reg file, you will see the EDID EEPROM data. Analysing the EDID will tell you what scan rates the TV supports. FWIW, if you post your EDID here, I may be able to analyse the data for you. BTW, if you want someone to help you, it would help them if you would indicate the TV's model number. - Franc Zabkar Hi again Franc, I don't have a registry key called Enum under HKLM...I'm using Vista, btw...that probably would've helped, eh? ![]() I hope you are aware that JVC booby-traped the DVI modue in this set to avoid tampering. If you remove the back without taking precautions say bye to your digital input. See: http://www.iwaynet.net/~nesda/Jan04/Jan0413.html Steve Yeah, I've read that. I haven't taken the back off, but I bought it second-hand, so it could have been serviced in the past. However, there is a way to reset the HDMI module from within the service menu (you do a self-check, then turn off the tv from within the menu and unplug for 30 seconds, according to a few forums I've read). However, I don't know how to get into this service menu. |
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