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|    sci.electronics.repair    |    Fixing electronic equipment    |    124,925 messages    |
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|    Message 122,933 of 124,925    |
|    ohger1s@gmail.com to legg    |
|    Re: duff screen detection.    |
|    13 Jul 22 11:14:21    |
      From: ohg...@gmail.com              On Wednesday, July 13, 2022 at 7:43:19 AM UTC-4, legg wrote:       > Just finished relamping a very modest flat screen, only        > to discover that the screen itself was damaged.        >        > Any way to see this without backlighting?        >        > RL              Depends. Some TVs with back lighting failures shut down, but others continue       to run. If you have sound (check every input), the TV is not shutting down       and a *bright* flashlight shown on the screen at several angles may show a dim       picture. If you        can get that far, look for a screen with no cracks and no lines or bands in       the image. Look OK?, pull the screen.              If the TV doesn't shut down and has more than one "channel" of LED lighting,       *disconnect* the LED harness and use an LED tester to light up any remaining       working part of the LED array. With the LEDs partially running, turn on the       TV and observe the pic.         It will be dim and uneven, but you can access the overall condition of the       display.              If it shuts down, go over the screen with that *bright* light and look for       cracks. There are ways of fooling the TV into not shutting down with a back       light error but it's usually easier to just use a bright light.              I've done several thousand at least back lighting repairs, and sometimes I       discover a crack only when the screen is removed. I hold the screens up to       my shop lights as if I was making an offering to the TV gods. A crack will be       visible when holding it        up to a bright light from behind.              Sometimes, you can repair the back lighting and you might discover an       electrical failure of the display or a debonding of the ribbons either at the       address boards or at the glass itself once you put it back together. Nothing       you can do about that - it        happens.              That all said, I can tell you that pulling screens on TVs is delicate and most       amateurs break nearly all the screens they attempt to fix (no offense). Many       screens are taped in the frame and must be heated carefully and a thin       membrane used to separate        the screen from the frame. They crack so easily you won't even know it until        you put it together. If the screen isn't sitting back down flush in the frame       when the mask is reinstalled you will crack the screen. If the address boards       are not handled        like newborn chicks, you will damage one or more of the ribbon bonds to the       screen.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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