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-   -   IF YOUR SO SMART TELL ME WHAT THIS IS !!!! (https://www.diybanter.com/electronics-repair/83662-if-your-so-smart-tell-me-what.html)

[email protected] December 29th 04 11:51 PM

IF YOUR SO SMART TELL ME WHAT THIS IS !!!!
 
Ive a throw away TV i salvaged, i knew it worked, and it does, i can
hook up dvd and game consoles but there is not cable plug in, its been
torn out. Does anyone know whta that peice is called? its the peice
that the cable line screws into in the back of the tv ... the tele is
an orion vhs player combo model, its about 19 maybe 21 inches if that
helps .. smarty pants


Jerry G. December 30th 04 12:34 AM

The connector can be a number of many types. Some types of them are
line isolated, so that the AC mains is isolated from the antenna return
path to prevent an electrical hazard between the TV's potential and the
antenna ground. Some tuner modules have internal isolation. There are
also models that are external from the tuner module itself, and are a
stand alone type module outside of the tuner.

You would have to first determine the specication required. From that,
you must then determine what type of connector configuration is
required. This would mean opening up the set, and then removing and
opening the tuner module, if necessary.

Sometimes when these are damaged, the circuit board in the tuner is
damaged if the connector is mounted directly on it.

Once all the above is determined, and if you can locate a compatible
connector, then it us the skill of the tech person to be able to change
the connector. If the tuner module is too badly damaged to be repaired,
then a new module will be required.

For safety issues, I would suggest you give the set out for proper
service. Depending on how the connector is broken, will determine if
the repair is able to be done, or is do-able. As far as parts are
consered, if this is a throw-away set, origional parts such as a tuner
module, or a custom type connector, will be impossible to obtain,
unless you can find a scrapper set with one that is identical, and is
in good condition.

Jerry G.
======


[email protected] December 30th 04 12:36 AM


just a dork:
........and you think you are going to obtain an answer to your question
here?
There are no "smarty pants" here....
just techs who can identify a smart ass "dork" who
doesn't get an answer.
= = = = = = = = = = = = =


wrote:
Ive a throw away TV i salvaged, i knew it worked, and it does, i can
hook up dvd and game consoles but there is not cable plug in, its

been
torn out. Does anyone know whta that peice is called? its the peice
that the cable line screws into in the back of the tv ... the tele is
an orion vhs player combo model, its about 19 maybe 21 inches if that
helps .. smarty pants



Papcina December 30th 04 01:20 AM

On 29 Dec 2004 16:36:43 -0800, wrote:


just a dork:
.......and you think you are going to obtain an answer to your question
here?
There are no "smarty pants" here....
just techs who can identify a smart ass "dork" who
doesn't get an answer.
= = = = = = = = = = = = =



LOL!
--
Check
www.aukcije.biz & www.pogodak.hr
Try to assimilate the f****** spam..... :)
Contact me @ :
( Remove obvious :) )

[email protected] December 30th 04 01:38 AM

brill jerry, thanks alot. i opened it and its a long rectangular slim
shiny box that plugs into a circuit board, it just has a yanked out
cable connector in the back, the male peice i guess u would call it,
its torn of like someone yanked the cord off and broke it in process.
board look ok, still connected just damaged connector box thingy. even
if you dont reply with more info on this youve helped alot, so thinks
jerry.


[email protected] December 30th 04 01:41 AM

brill jerry, thanks alot. i opened it and its a long rectangular slim
shiny box that plugs into a circuit board, it just has a yanked out
cable connector in the back, the male peice i guess u would call it,
its torn of like someone yanked the cord off and broke it in process.
board look ok, still connected just damaged connector box thingy. even
if you dont reply with more info on this youve helped alot, so thinks
jerry.


[email protected] December 30th 04 01:44 AM

dont you look stupid


Bruce Lane December 30th 04 02:54 AM

In article . com,
says...

snip near-unintelligible post

Does the public school system, in these bizarre times, even try to
teach grammar, spelling, and punctuation usage?

If I had written anything that poorly in one of my previous
English classes, the instructor would have failed me on the spot.

To the original poster: Do you really think you're going to get
much help by throwing veiled insults around in your 'Subject' line,
right off the bat, and then throw more of them into the body of your
post?

*PLONK!*

--
Dr. Anton T. Squeegee, Director, Dutch Surrealist Plumbing Institute.
(Known to some as Bruce Lane, ARS KC7GR,
kyrrin (a/t) bluefeathertech[d=o=t]calm --
www.bluefeathertech.com
"If Salvador Dali had owned a computer, would it have been equipped
with surreal ports?"

[email protected] December 30th 04 03:36 AM

dearest plonk master,

As you may not have noticed one Jerry G. has already responded.
so you can kiss my arse!


William R. Walsh December 30th 04 05:27 AM

Hi!

This probably happened when someone was moving the TV set. The cable was too
short and the connector on the end of that box just got ripped out! I've
never had it happen and I've always found the ones on the TV sets here to be
very firmly attached, but I guess with enough abuse anything is possible.

You could try to locate a new end (it's probably a 75 ohm round, possibly
"female" connector...sorry, I don't know the exact term for that type) and
if you have the time, skill, and an understanding of how to work safely
inside the set, it could possibly be repaired. A new module is probably
rather expensive and likely will be hard to find given that Orion is a
lower-end brand that may not have a lot of service parts available.

If you can't get the parts or don't feel comfortable working inside the set,
then you could probably just use it as it is with the video/audio inputs.
The set shouldn't "notice the difference" and you could use a VCR or cable
box as a tuner. I doubt that the safety of the set will be impacted in any
significant way.

William



J. Doe December 30th 04 06:14 PM

wrote:
so you can kiss my arse!


Your pointy head is in the way Dork...............



[email protected] December 30th 04 10:31 PM

excellent - 75 ohm round, i fugred it was female, but the idea of
useing a cable box as a tuner thats brill, hadnt thought of it. thanks
to you mr. walsh.


William R. Walsh December 31st 04 01:48 AM

Hi!

wrote in message
ups.com...
excellent - 75 ohm round, i fugred it was female, but the idea of
useing a cable box as a tuner thats brill, hadnt thought of it. thanks
to you mr. walsh.


Another good use of this technique is to drive old video monitors with
composite (separate video and audio connections) inputs but no tuner. I'm
speaking of the old monitors that would have once gone with Apple II,
Commodore 64 or other computers of similar vintage. Most of them have
onboard speakers and can be repurposed into a nice, small and very high
clarity TV set. I have here a very nice Magnavox monitor with stereo audio.
It goes well with a DVD player and puts off a very nice picture with decent
sound. (Plus, the "color kill" switch that makes everything green can make
for a more interesting way to watch TV... :-) )

By the way...I wrote down cable box in my reply a little too soon. That may
or may not work. I don't think I've ever seen a cable box with composite
output, but I haven't been around a lot of cable TV systems.

William



Tom MacIntyre December 31st 04 09:40 PM

On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 01:48:38 GMT, "William R. Walsh"
wrote:

Hi!

wrote in message
oups.com...
excellent - 75 ohm round, i fugred it was female, but the idea of
useing a cable box as a tuner thats brill, hadnt thought of it. thanks
to you mr. walsh.


Another good use of this technique is to drive old video monitors with
composite (separate video and audio connections) inputs but no tuner. I'm
speaking of the old monitors that would have once gone with Apple II,
Commodore 64 or other computers of similar vintage. Most of them have
onboard speakers and can be repurposed into a nice, small and very high
clarity TV set. I have here a very nice Magnavox monitor with stereo audio.
It goes well with a DVD player and puts off a very nice picture with decent
sound. (Plus, the "color kill" switch that makes everything green can make
for a more interesting way to watch TV... :-) )

By the way...I wrote down cable box in my reply a little too soon. That may
or may not work. I don't think I've ever seen a cable box with composite
output, but I haven't been around a lot of cable TV systems.

William


They at least used to exist.

Tom


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