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fred[_11_] November 5th 14 01:29 AM

Motorola DCT6416 HDMI failure
 
The HDMI port on my Motorola DCT6416 suddenly stopped working.
The composite Video still works ok. Searching for HDMI failure on that
model comes up with plenty of hits (seems to be a common problem),
but I cannot find anything on what the exact component(s) are that
fail. I opened it up and checked for any visible problem, but didn't see
anything obvious.
Has anyone dealt with these DVRs or can provide any idea of what's
involved, or if it is even worthwhile trying to get it fixed? Thanks



John-Del November 5th 14 12:44 PM

Motorola DCT6416 HDMI failure
 
On Tuesday, November 4, 2014 8:27:51 PM UTC-5, fred wrote:
The HDMI port on my Motorola DCT6416 suddenly stopped working.
The composite Video still works ok. Searching for HDMI failure on that
model comes up with plenty of hits (seems to be a common problem),
but I cannot find anything on what the exact component(s) are that
fail. I opened it up and checked for any visible problem, but didn't see
anything obvious.
Has anyone dealt with these DVRs or can provide any idea of what's
involved, or if it is even worthwhile trying to get it fixed? Thanks


Most HDMI failures are either from corrupted firmware or a bad HDMI transceiver chip. Follow the fine foil lines from the HDMI jack to an IC. Get the number off it and check on line for the datasheet. That's what usually causes the problem. HDMI ports are notorious for being whacked by lightning hits, and it doesn't take much.

fred[_11_] November 5th 14 04:32 PM

Motorola DCT6416 HDMI failure
 
"John-Del" wrote
Most HDMI failures are either from corrupted firmware or a bad HDMI
transceiver chip. Follow the fine foil lines from the HDMI jack to an
IC. Get the number off it and check on line for the datasheet.
That's what usually causes the problem. HDMI ports are notorious for
being whacked by lightning hits, and it doesn't take much.


The DVR menu says HDMI ENABLED, but not ACTIVE. The re-activation didn't
help, and my cable provider couldn't (or wouldn't) tell me where they get
their rented DVRs repaired. Since I own the box, I phoned around for
estimates, but none had ever fixed any of these, and so they told me that
the repair cost would likely be higher than buying a new one.

If I knew for sure that a particular chip was defective, I would probably
try replacing it myself, but I think it makes more cost-efficient sense to
just get another one. Appreciate your reply.





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