Main Page | Report this Page
 
   
Science Forum Index  »  Electronics - Repair Forum  »  LCD Monitor problem...
Page 2 of 2    Goto page Previous  1, 2
Author Message
James Sweet...
Posted: Thu May 08, 2008 7:41 pm
Guest
Quote:
That's interesting. On some Sony servo boards fitted to many of their CD
players a few years back, there were three sm electros along one edge of the
board, which used to go faulty, and occasionally leak. This gave the symptom
of either totally refusing to play, or very poor playability. If you tried
to sub regular electros for them, the board would never work again, even if
it worked, allbeit poorly, before. However, fit the correct sm types, and it
would immediately work again to full original spec.

Arfa





Sony has a history of building things which are very particular about
the components used. I've had issues with some of the TVs not working
with subs that were fine in everything else.
Michael Kennedy...
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 12:07 am
Guest
"Arfa Daily" <arfa.daily at (no spam) ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:6WMUj.38661$Cr1.10799 at (no spam) newsfe18.ams2...
Quote:

"Michael Kennedy" <Mikek400 at (no spam) remthis.comcast.net> wrote in message
news:Bq-dnUl_ne9qKr_VnZ2dnUVZ_hKdnZ2d at (no spam) comcast.com...

"James Sweet" <jamessweet at (no spam) hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:3P%Tj.19807$aA1.15676 at (no spam) trnddc05...


"Heinz Schmitz" <HeinzSchmitz at (no spam) gmx.net> wrote in message
news:5j7024dgsf97i9da2vrm8sf66gbmu09h0g at (no spam) 4ax.com...
James Sweet wrote:

Usually when one of these
surface mount capacitors is bad, the rest are nearly shot too. I
usually
replace them all, then the thing is good for years.

I'd be interested to know what makes you so sure that the caps
you bought for replacement are of superior longevity compared
to those the manufacturer did put in Smile.

Regards,
H.



Well for starters they don't have several years of use on them. All else
being equal, they're probably not. I hate surface mount lytics.


I replace them with regular through hole caps. It usually works without
any problems. Just bend over the leads and solder them to the lands on
the board. The biggest reason I do this is I can`t get smd stuff locally
but can get almost any value through hole cap.

Mike

That's interesting. On some Sony servo boards fitted to many of their CD
players a few years back, there were three sm electros along one edge of
the board, which used to go faulty, and occasionally leak. This gave the
symptom of either totally refusing to play, or very poor playability. If
you tried to sub regular electros for them, the board would never work
again, even if it worked, allbeit poorly, before. However, fit the correct
sm types, and it would immediately work again to full original spec.

Arfa


Well I haven`t worked on nearly as much equipment as you have so, I`m sure
that there are plenty of things that you know that I dont. Wink I am just a
novice and just mess around with stuff of mine that breaks or stuff I get
for free.

Mike
Wiebe Cazemier...
Posted: Fri May 09, 2008 7:07 pm
Guest
On Friday 09 May 2008 16:42, Arfa Daily wrote:

Quote:
That's certainly a possibility. The servo data strippers and loops, are
quite sensitive bits of circuitry in CD players, and these caps are glued
straight on the end of pins on the servo processor chip, so they may well be
decouplers or timing caps.

Arfa

I would hope that all timing is done with a clock pulse, based on a crystal.
Caps used for timings yield very unstable circuits, at least where high
frequencies are concerned, such as FM transmitters.
 
Page 2 of 2    Goto page Previous  1, 2   All times are GMT - 5 Hours
The time now is Mon Jul 07, 2008 10:31 am