Maker Pro
Maker Pro

dark screen on 35 inch panasonic tv. repairable?

I have a ten year old 35" panasonic tv that has lately started to have
a very dark picture. Even with the brightness turned up all the way,
when the characters are in a dark scene the screen is almost completely
black. Any ideas on what the problems are and if it's worth repairing?
 
D

Dani

Jan 1, 1970
0
Great older T.V. Worth fixing, as long as the dim picture is clear. You
may need to adjust the G 2 on the flyback, or more likely it could be a
bad couple of electrolytic capacitors. May even just need some
soldering, for bad connections, especially if
there is a video input/output board in the set. Dani.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have a ten year old 35" panasonic tv that has lately started to have
a very dark picture. Even with the brightness turned up all the way,
when the characters are in a dark scene the screen is almost completely
black. Any ideas on what the problems are and if it's worth repairing?


Is the onscreen display dark too or is it normal? I fixed a big CRT set
a few years back that had a very dark picture but OSD was normal
brightness. I finally tracked it down to a tiny 1/8W resistor in the ABL
circuit thanks to a tip from this newsgroup pointing me to that general
area.
 
James said:
Is the onscreen display dark too or is it normal? I fixed a big CRT set
a few years back that had a very dark picture but OSD was normal
brightness. I finally tracked it down to a tiny 1/8W resistor in the ABL
circuit thanks to a tip from this newsgroup pointing me to that general
area.

I'm betting on the common 1/8W resistor on the ABL line on this one
also.
 
O

Ohmster

Jan 1, 1970
0
[email protected] wrote in @s13g2000cwa.googlegroups.com:
I have a ten year old 35" panasonic tv that has lately started to have
a very dark picture. Even with the brightness turned up all the way,
when the characters are in a dark scene the screen is almost completely
black. Any ideas on what the problems are and if it's worth repairing?

I have fixed several Panasonic TV sets by replacing the ceramic capacitor
on the CRT board that goes to the G2 (Screen voltage) pin on the CRT. The
cap gets a little bit leaky and drags down the G2 on the picture tube.
Replace the cap and all is golden.
 
Top