Maker Pro
Maker Pro

TV going whacky - Fix, or Replace?

I have a 30 inch Toshiba tube TV that has variable width horizontal
black lines appearing at the bottom of the screen as well as the
picture extending beyond the edges of the tube. I really like the TV,
and am wondering if it sounds like an easy fix, or if the tube is going
out... Please let me know if you think that you know what the problem
is, and if it is better to fix it, or buy a new TV (this one is about 6
years old or so). Thanks in advance.
 
A

Arfa Daily

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have a 30 inch Toshiba tube TV that has variable width horizontal
black lines appearing at the bottom of the screen as well as the
picture extending beyond the edges of the tube. I really like the TV,
and am wondering if it sounds like an easy fix, or if the tube is going
out... Please let me know if you think that you know what the problem
is, and if it is better to fix it, or buy a new TV (this one is about 6
years old or so). Thanks in advance.

I'm not an expert on TV sets these days, but one thing that I think you can
be pretty certain that those symptoms are NOT, is the tube. If the problem
is one of intermittent picture geometry, you are likely looking at nothing
more than a bad joint, which will need attention sooner rather than later,
before it does any proper damage. I have also known problems around the
EEPROM that stores geometry data, give problems like this, but either way,
it's probably not a serious problem at this point.

One other thing springs to mind. Could it be that the TV is not switching
correctly to the transmitted format ? There are so many now that some older
TVs have trouble coping with them all. My mother has a Panasonic, and before
we finally fixed her up with signals for its digital tuner, on analogue, she
used to suffer just what you describe, as it tried to switch to "best fit"
for the format being transmitted at the time. I guess you would know if it
was this, if it does it at the start of a programme, and stays like it
throughout, or switches back again at the commercials. I'm sure there are
others on here who will be able to give you a more concise answer, but in
the meantime, it would be handy if you could post the actual model number,
to allow them to better help you with the problem.

Arfa
 
I have a 30 inch Toshiba tube TV that has variable width horizontal
black lines appearing at the bottom of the screen as well as the
picture extending beyond the edges of the tube. I really like the TV,
and am wondering if it sounds like an easy fix, or if the tube is going
out... Please let me know if you think that you know what the problem
is, and if it is better to fix it, or buy a new TV (this one is about 6
years old or so). Thanks in advance.

as Arfa says its not the tube. whether its worth fixing depends on your
local economy, and I dont even know where you are.


NT
 
J

JANA

Jan 1, 1970
0
Most of the time with age, the electrolytic capacitors start failing in many
of the TV models. A service tech can easily troubleshoot the set, locate the
defective parts, and then replace them. You will have to be ready to pay for
the cost.

Considering the low prices for TV sets these days, and that you have an
older set, I would seriously consider a new model. If you really like the
set, and have the money to service it and take a chance on its age, then
that is your decision.

--

JANA
_____


I have a 30 inch Toshiba tube TV that has variable width horizontal
black lines appearing at the bottom of the screen as well as the
picture extending beyond the edges of the tube. I really like the TV,
and am wondering if it sounds like an easy fix, or if the tube is going
out... Please let me know if you think that you know what the problem
is, and if it is better to fix it, or buy a new TV (this one is about 6
years old or so). Thanks in advance.
 
J

James Sweet

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have a 30 inch Toshiba tube TV that has variable width horizontal
black lines appearing at the bottom of the screen as well as the
picture extending beyond the edges of the tube. I really like the TV,
and am wondering if it sounds like an easy fix, or if the tube is going
out... Please let me know if you think that you know what the problem
is, and if it is better to fix it, or buy a new TV (this one is about 6
years old or so). Thanks in advance.


Well it certainly isn't the tube. Why don't you bring it to a shop and
get an estimate? If you know a few things about electronic repair you
can get some tips here to work on it yourself but it sounds like you
don't. The learning curve is too steep to start from scratch and jump
right in with something like this.
 
S

Sam Goldwasser

Jan 1, 1970
0
JANA said:
Most of the time with age, the electrolytic capacitors start failing in many
of the TV models. A service tech can easily troubleshoot the set, locate the
defective parts, and then replace them. You will have to be ready to pay for
the cost.

Considering the low prices for TV sets these days, and that you have an
older set, I would seriously consider a new model. If you really like the
set, and have the money to service it and take a chance on its age, then
that is your decision.

First, it's not the tube.

Sounds like capacitors as mentioned above. This should be an easy fix
as these things go.

Last I heard, 30 inch TVs weren't *that* cheap. :)

And, since when is 6 years automatically an "older set"?

--- sam | Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/
Repair | Main Table of Contents: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/
+Lasers | Sam's Laser FAQ: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/lasersam.htm
| Mirror Sites: http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_mirror.html

Important: Anything sent to the email address in the message header above is
ignored unless my full name AND either lasers or electronics is included in the
subject line. Or, you can contact me via the Feedback Form in the FAQs.
 
Top