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Color temperature problem with Dell P1110
Hello,
I've got a Dell P1110 that came to me with multiple problems. It had the well-known excessive brightness problem which I cured using the hack of bridging an additional resistor across one of the two 10M resistors that lead to G2. It also had a slow warmup...around 60 seconds before a picture would appear. This was cured by replacing C685 on the power supply board which was high ESR. The last problem I haven't been able to figure out yet. I belive this problem started when I used the "color return" function available from the user controls, but I can't remember for sure. Basically, the front panel brightness controls have little or no effect on brightness, but they do affect the color temperature. A low brightness setting gives the screen a blueish tint, while a high brightness setting gives the screen a reddish tint. The contrast control seems to work fine from what I can tell. If anyone has any ideas of what may be wrong, I'd be interested in hearing them. Either that or can I "undo" the color return function? i.e. Is there some "reset" I can access through a hidden menu or something? Thanks, Mike Cencula |
"Michael D. Cencula" wrote in message
... Hello, I've got a Dell P1110 that came to me with multiple problems. It had the well-known excessive brightness problem which I cured using the hack of bridging an additional resistor across one of the two 10M resistors that lead to G2. It also had a slow warmup...around 60 seconds before a picture would appear. This was cured by replacing C685 on the power supply board which was high ESR. The last problem I haven't been able to figure out yet. I belive this problem started when I used the "color return" function available from the user controls, but I can't remember for sure. Basically, the front panel brightness controls have little or no effect on brightness, but they do affect the color temperature. A low brightness setting gives the screen a blueish tint, while a high brightness setting gives the screen a reddish tint. The contrast control seems to work fine from what I can tell. If anyone has any ideas of what may be wrong, I'd be interested in hearing them. Either that or can I "undo" the color return function? i.e. Is there some "reset" I can access through a hidden menu or something? Thanks, Mike Cencula ---------------------------------- Paste unknown old post here I have repaired over 500 Dell P1110 Most of the problems I have seen are for Excessively bright picture. R459 is the best to Mod and Have found that 5.6M ohms to 7.5M ohms to be the repair range depending on how bright the picture has become. The lower the Value of R459 the darker the picture will become. I have noticed that when a lower value is needed often the bightness adjustment will also shift the picture color. Darker settings will shift to blue and brighter settings will shift to red. I have not found a way to compensate or repair this problem. I have a number of P1110 that have convergence problems where the center of the picture is good but the sides and top/bottom are off, front panel controls have no effect on edges of screen, and convergence rings and yoke adjustment cannot restore good picture. This is a problem with the video board on the bottom of chassis, I have swapped this out and restored convergence. It's not always perfect as DAS adjustment is need to align monitor. DAS I have located many different versions of the Sony DAS. some for DOS and some for windows 9x, all require dongle (HASP). I have also located many HASP emulator progams. I have yet to get them to work without the Hasp. I did find one DOS version Of the DAS that has been BIN hacked to ignore the Hasp search. I was able to read the information from the EEPROM with the hacked version, But the version did not have the Data to reprogam the EEPROM in the Dell P1110. So I am working on hacking the Dell DAS version DAS 4.9.1. *** wish me luck ! ***** I addition to needing the DAS software and the HASP or a work around you will need to get 3 peices from SONY that create an interface between a desktop PC and the monitor you are adjusting. This "JIG" rig (3 pieces) cost about $250 plus shipping. I don't understand why this Crap is such a hassle to get unless Sony doesn't want you to to be able repair your own Monitor, even if you are technically capable ! I found this post a few weeks ago and using a 14M resistor paralled, managed an acceptable repair. Some intermittent color issues were observed but the user "cleared" them. I do not know who posted this or where, I googled got lucky and copied it for my own use. Maybe the original poster will recognize his work and follow up. -- They can have my command prompt when they pry it from my cold dead fingers. |
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