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Intermittent static when viewing cable, cable ready problem?

I have an intermittent static problem on one tv in my house. When
watching cable short and annoying blasts of video and audio static
occur repeatedly until I give trying to watch. Or ometimes it only
happens once a day and will be days before it happens again. Two
diffent cable tech say it is the tv. The other tv in the house does
not have this problem. I finally switched our second tv with the one
that has the problem and the static has not happened since.

The tv with the problem is a 31" Toshiba. When playing dvd's (using
either the svid or composite video input) the image is perfect the
static never intrudes.

If the problem was in that line (wiring or connections) then I believe
the problem would occur on whatever tv was in use in that room. I am
left to believe that the problem must be in the cable ready portion of
the tv. Anyone know any common problems or thing I should check on the
cable ready board??

I can check and replace electronics, I work on pinball machines. But I
have schematics and know the common pinball aliments.

Thanks,
Dug
 
rhino:
Frankly.... if the diagnosis points to the tuner module in the
television, then it would be easier and cheaper for you to just use a
VCR to do the tuning. Any VCR built in the last 10-13 years will be
able to tune all of the cable tv channels... and if you use a STEREO HI
FI VCR and feed the television via the composite video/stereo audio
jacks into the A/V input of the television the result will be very
good.
electricitym
 
J

Joseph Meehan

Jan 1, 1970
0
rhino:
Frankly.... if the diagnosis points to the tuner module in the
television, then it would be easier and cheaper for you to just use a
VCR to do the tuning. Any VCR built in the last 10-13 years will be
able to tune all of the cable tv channels... and if you use a STEREO
HI FI VCR and feed the television via the composite video/stereo audio
jacks into the A/V input of the television the result will be very
good.
electricitym

I would agree and the idea of using the VCR is a good one.
 
Thanks for the quick responses.

I don't know if tuning with in VCR would help, I have digital cable
and am only tuning in one channel. I also removed the digital box and
experienced the problem intermittently as well.
 
E

Edwin Pawlowski

Jan 1, 1970
0
Thanks for the quick responses.

I don't know if tuning with in VCR would help, I have digital cable
and am only tuning in one channel. I also removed the digital box and
experienced the problem intermittently as well.

If that is the case, you may also lose some digital channels if you use the
VCR instead. Depends also on the bale company and what signals you get.
 
rhino:
You can tune the "one channel" with the VCR's tuner.... just like you
did with the television's tuner.
If the problem still persists then your wiring is suspect.
Try what I suggested before you so readily discount it as a valid
solution. Post the results
electricitym
 
J

Joseph Meehan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Thanks for the quick responses.

I don't know if tuning with in VCR would help, I have digital cable
and am only tuning in one channel. I also removed the digital box and
experienced the problem intermittently as well.

Does the set have any inputs other than antena? That was my assumption
when I supported the idea of using the tuner from another device. If you
have to use the cable input then it would not be likely to help.
 
Joseph:
yes... it has other inputs and the VCR method will work fine.
excerpt from OP:
"The tv with the problem is a 31" Toshiba. When playing dvd's (using
either the svid or composite video input) the image is perfect the
static never intrudes."
electricitym
 
R

Ross Mac

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have an intermittent static problem on one tv in my house. When
watching cable short and annoying blasts of video and audio static
occur repeatedly until I give trying to watch. Or ometimes it only
happens once a day and will be days before it happens again. Two
diffent cable tech say it is the tv. The other tv in the house does
not have this problem. I finally switched our second tv with the one
that has the problem and the static has not happened since.

The tv with the problem is a 31" Toshiba. When playing dvd's (using
either the svid or composite video input) the image is perfect the
static never intrudes.

If the problem was in that line (wiring or connections) then I believe
the problem would occur on whatever tv was in use in that room. I am
left to believe that the problem must be in the cable ready portion of
the tv. Anyone know any common problems or thing I should check on the
cable ready board??

I can check and replace electronics, I work on pinball machines. But I
have schematics and know the common pinball aliments.

Thanks,
Dug

My guess would be connections as others have posted. Whether at the splitter
or in the set. Try testing the set at a neighbors house.
If it is the set and you want to try your hand at fixing it then get a
bright light and a magnifying glass and look for cracks or dark spots in the
solder connections at the tuner. Usually it will be a part that runs warm
and is moving back and forth when the set is on or off or maybe a single
sided board without enough solder. Just heat up the connection and run some
solder into any connection that looks suspicious. Also check for discolored
connections. They could be the cause too but no guarantee. Please make sure
to unplug the TV not just turn it off just to be safe...
Another idea would be to post this on sci.electronics.repair and make sure
to leave the full model number...There are some excellent techs over there
and you might just have a well known bug with an easy fix.....good luck...
 
R

Ross Mac

Jan 1, 1970
0
Ross Mac said:
My guess would be connections as others have posted. Whether at the
splitter or in the set. Try testing the set at a neighbors house.
If it is the set and you want to try your hand at fixing it then get a
bright light and a magnifying glass and look for cracks or dark spots in
the solder connections at the tuner. Usually it will be a part that runs
warm and is moving back and forth when the set is on or off or maybe a
single sided board without enough solder. Just heat up the connection and
run some solder into any connection that looks suspicious. Also check for
discolored connections. They could be the cause too but no guarantee.
Please make sure to unplug the TV not just turn it off just to be safe...
Another idea would be to post this on sci.electronics.repair and make sure
to leave the full model number...There are some excellent techs over there
and you might just have a well known bug with an easy fix.....good luck...
Woops...you already posted it there...my mistake...
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

Jan 1, 1970
0
My guess would be connections as others have posted. Whether at
the splitter or in the set. Try testing the set at a neighbors
house. If it is the set and you want to try your hand at fixing it
then get a bright light and a magnifying glass and look for cracks
or dark spots in the solder connections at the tuner. Usually it
will be a part that runs warm and is moving back and forth when
the set is on or off or maybe a single sided board without enough
solder. Just heat up the connection and run some solder into any
connection that looks suspicious. Also check for discolored
connections. They could be the cause too but no guarantee. Please
make sure to unplug the TV not just turn it off just to be safe...
Another idea would be to post this on sci.electronics.repair and
make sure to leave the full model number...There are some
excellent techs over there and you might just have a well known
bug with an easy fix.....good luck...

Note that CRT TVs have large capacitors with large voltages that
hold their charge for a long time.

An unplugged TV is not necessarily safe...

Gino
 
After you awapped tvs and the problem did not reoccur, did you go back
to the original location for each set, or did you leave them swapped?
That is crucial to know before we make further prognoses.

H. R. Hofmann
 
After you swapped tvs and the problem did not reoccur, did you go back
to the original location for each set, or did you leave them swapped?
That is crucial to know before we make further prognoses.

H. R. Hofmann
 
After you swapped tvs and the problem did not reoccur, did you go back
to the original location for each set, or did you leave them swapped?
That is crucial to know before we make further prognoses.

H. R. Hofmann
 
After you swapped tvs and the problem did not reoccur, did you go back
to the original location for each set, or did you leave them swapped?
That is crucial to know before we make further prognoses.

H. R. Hofmann
 
R

Ross Mac

Jan 1, 1970
0
Gene E. Bloch said:
Note that CRT TVs have large capacitors with large voltages that
hold their charge for a long time.

An unplugged TV is not necessarily safe...

Gino
This is true and those experienced in the electronic field would know
this....The OP indicated that he knew something about electrical repair so
it was not mentioned....
 
R

Ross Mac

Jan 1, 1970
0
After you swapped tvs and the problem did not reoccur, did you go back
to the original location for each set, or did you leave them swapped?
That is crucial to know before we make further prognoses.

H. R. Hofmann

Is there an echo in here??
 
G

Gene E. Bloch

Jan 1, 1970
0
This is true and those experienced in the electronic field would know
this....The OP indicated that he knew something about electrical repair so it
was not mentioned....

The OP might not be the only one reading this thread, so I felt it
wouldn't hurt to mention it.

I have had a couple of nasty shocks from unplugged TVs, but I did
survive - perhaps :)

Gino
 
R

Ross Mac

Jan 1, 1970
0
Gene E. Bloch said:
The OP might not be the only one reading this thread, so I felt it
wouldn't hurt to mention it.

I have had a couple of nasty shocks from unplugged TVs, but I did
survive - perhaps :)

Gino
Damm that hurts doesn't it!....
 
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