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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 ViewSonic EA771 monitor which is generating TVI (TV
interference) throughout the house. It shows up as horizontal lines, mostly on channel 6 (we don't have cable). I called Viewsonic, and they told me to put a metal box over the monitor...Yea! like that's really going to happen! I did try to shield the monitor with aluminum foil, but that didn't help. I also bought an RFI filter from Radio Shack, and used RFI/surge surpressors on the AC lines, without success. When the monitor's video high voltage is removed (blank, dark screen) the TVI goes away. Any other ideas or suggestions? Ron K |
#2
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Just for the fun of it, try another resolution setting to see if the
interference changes or goes away. This will tell you if the interference is from the high voltage, or the horizontal scan output amplifier section. If it is from the power supply, there may also not be any change here. Atleast if the interference changes or goes away, you will know it is most likely the horizontal output stage that is causing this. Channel 6 is at about 87 mHz. This is a very high frequency in comparison to what I would expect to find in a monitor where there is a large amount of power to radiate some signal, therefore this fault is very unusual. -- Jerry G. ========================== "Ron K" wrote in message om... I have a ViewSonic EA771 monitor which is generating TVI (TV interference) throughout the house. It shows up as horizontal lines, mostly on channel 6 (we don't have cable). I called Viewsonic, and they told me to put a metal box over the monitor...Yea! like that's really going to happen! I did try to shield the monitor with aluminum foil, but that didn't help. I also bought an RFI filter from Radio Shack, and used RFI/surge surpressors on the AC lines, without success. When the monitor's video high voltage is removed (blank, dark screen) the TVI goes away. Any other ideas or suggestions? Ron K |
#3
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"Jerry G." bravely wrote to "All" (19 Aug 04 18:10:57)
--- on the heady topic of " ViewSonic EA771 Monitor TVI Problem" JG From: "Jerry G." JG Channel 6 is at about 87 mHz. This is a very high frequency in JG comparison to what I would expect to find in a monitor where there is a JG large amount of power to radiate some signal, therefore this fault is JG very unusual. 87 mHz is like seismic waves... You must have meant 87MegaHertz. ;-) A+s+i+m+o+v .... KPLA: Klingon Radio: All Klingon Opera, All The Time. |
#4
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The term Hertz, comes from the scientist that devised Herzian waves, what is
really cycles of waves. The letter "m" is for mega. The small "z" is to identify that the "H" is from Hertz, and not some other abbreviation. Therefore, mHz for "mega-Hertz". -- Jerry G. GLG Technologies GLG ========================== "Asimov" wrote in message ... "Jerry G." bravely wrote to "All" (19 Aug 04 18:10:57) --- on the heady topic of " ViewSonic EA771 Monitor TVI Problem" JG From: "Jerry G." JG Channel 6 is at about 87 mHz. This is a very high frequency in JG comparison to what I would expect to find in a monitor where there is a JG large amount of power to radiate some signal, therefore this fault is JG very unusual. 87 mHz is like seismic waves... You must have meant 87MegaHertz. ;-) A+s+i+m+o+v .... KPLA: Klingon Radio: All Klingon Opera, All The Time. |
#5
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I think you forgot the caps on the "M".
Standard units prefix notation: 'm' = milli 'M'= Mega "Jerry G." wrote in message ... Just for the fun of it, try another resolution setting to see if the interference changes or goes away. This will tell you if the interference is from the high voltage, or the horizontal scan output amplifier section. If it is from the power supply, there may also not be any change here. Atleast if the interference changes or goes away, you will know it is most likely the horizontal output stage that is causing this. Channel 6 is at about 87 mHz. This is a very high frequency in comparison to what I would expect to find in a monitor where there is a large amount of power to radiate some signal, therefore this fault is very unusual. -- Jerry G. ========================== "Ron K" wrote in message om... I have a ViewSonic EA771 monitor which is generating TVI (TV interference) throughout the house. It shows up as horizontal lines, mostly on channel 6 (we don't have cable). I called Viewsonic, and they told me to put a metal box over the monitor...Yea! like that's really going to happen! I did try to shield the monitor with aluminum foil, but that didn't help. I also bought an RFI filter from Radio Shack, and used RFI/surge surpressors on the AC lines, without success. When the monitor's video high voltage is removed (blank, dark screen) the TVI goes away. Any other ideas or suggestions? Ron K |
#6
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"Jerry G." bravely wrote to "All" (21 Aug 04 05:46:42)
--- on the heady topic of " ViewSonic EA771 Monitor TVI Problem" JG From: "Jerry G." JG The term Hertz, comes from the scientist that devised Herzian waves, JG what is really cycles of waves. The letter "m" is for mega. The small JG "z" is to identify that the "H" is from Hertz, and not some other JG abbreviation. Therefore, mHz for "mega-Hertz". I don't want to pick a nit, Jerry, but the small m is reserved for milli- and the capital M is reserved for Mega- according to all the sources I've checked. I understand what you mean though. This is the kind of units error that led to the loss of the Mars Observer and the Gimly glider, as you might remember. A+s+i+m+o+v .... VHF Ham radio operators do it with two meters! |
#7
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"David" wrote in message ...
I think you forgot the caps on the "M". Standard units prefix notation: 'm' = milli 'M'= Mega Meanwhile, back at the ranch.... Jerry G. and I have been exchanging e-mails about troubleshooting my monitor. We have made some REAL progress, using just a small, digital FM radio to isolate where the TVI is coming from. I've been away for the past week, but plan to remove the monitor's cabinet and track down the culprit. P.S. I still measure frequency in cycles per second...but that's just me... :-) Ron K |
#8
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#9
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Well, popping off the cover of my EA771 monitor, I carefully probed
around with my FM radio, looking for the source of the RF radiation. It seemed to be strongest near the shielded metal box at the far end of the CRT. This box has about six different ground wires running to it. I tried moving the ground wires, without effect. I tried adding more shielding to the box using aluminum tape- no effect. There is also 87.5 MHz radiation around the yoke, and the power supply area. Not much I could do about the yoke, but after turning off the monitor, and waiting awhile, I re-soldered some flaky-looking solder joints, and tried it again. No effect. RF is fairly hard to isolate, and even more difficult to contain. I put the monitor cover back on. I could have experimented more with the frequency and characteristics of the TVI as suggested, but I just wanted to get rid of it. Finally, I went out and bought an FM trap from Radio Shack. I hooked it up to my TV and…no effect! The patterns are still present. It's sad, because the monitor has never given me a problem, is as solid as a rock, and has great color. Ponder…Ponder…Ponder Ron K |
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