P
Phimor
- Jan 1, 1970
- 0
I was hoping for some insight by more experienced people on this one:
Short version:
After repair (HOT) TV works fine, but spot killer is inadequate. Bang
and Olufsen Beovision 8800, approx 25 years old.
Long version:
I'm a complete newbie with this. I got the TV for nothing, and using
Sam's FAQ I diagnosed a blown HOT (BU208), replaced it, and the fuse,
and presto the set came on. A slightly bright picture and inapropriate
range in the brightness control got me to experiment with the pot on
the neck of the tube. Adjusted to a better range, and I now can get a
black screen when the brightness is set to zero. The picture is
stable, bright and I found a 'one for all' remote to work (most)of
the user functions.
So far so good. The only disappointment is a bright spot for a few
seconds after the set is turned off.
Turning off, the screen goes dark for a split second, then the spot
appears, also for a short time (less than 3 seconds) and fades off.
Now, given the age of set and the outrageous price I paid for it, and
my complete inexperience in the topic, maybe I should think myself
lucky and leave at that. But I would be surprised to think a BO set
would have this 'feature'. Also, maybe, I think a total fix might be
within reach, only if I new where to look (a weak supply capacitor in
the horizontal oscillator, for example).
Call me sentimental, but this is the first TV I have fixed. It would
be nice to get it 'just right'. Also I hate sending stuff to
land-fill unnecessarilly - I assume the tube will not last long
before a 'burn in' in the centre of the screen.
Please help me finesse this job and indulge my obsessive tendencies
;-)
Thanks
Philippe
Short version:
After repair (HOT) TV works fine, but spot killer is inadequate. Bang
and Olufsen Beovision 8800, approx 25 years old.
Long version:
I'm a complete newbie with this. I got the TV for nothing, and using
Sam's FAQ I diagnosed a blown HOT (BU208), replaced it, and the fuse,
and presto the set came on. A slightly bright picture and inapropriate
range in the brightness control got me to experiment with the pot on
the neck of the tube. Adjusted to a better range, and I now can get a
black screen when the brightness is set to zero. The picture is
stable, bright and I found a 'one for all' remote to work (most)of
the user functions.
So far so good. The only disappointment is a bright spot for a few
seconds after the set is turned off.
Turning off, the screen goes dark for a split second, then the spot
appears, also for a short time (less than 3 seconds) and fades off.
Now, given the age of set and the outrageous price I paid for it, and
my complete inexperience in the topic, maybe I should think myself
lucky and leave at that. But I would be surprised to think a BO set
would have this 'feature'. Also, maybe, I think a total fix might be
within reach, only if I new where to look (a weak supply capacitor in
the horizontal oscillator, for example).
Call me sentimental, but this is the first TV I have fixed. It would
be nice to get it 'just right'. Also I hate sending stuff to
land-fill unnecessarilly - I assume the tube will not last long
before a 'burn in' in the centre of the screen.
Please help me finesse this job and indulge my obsessive tendencies
;-)
Thanks
Philippe