Cavey
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Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
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TV has started playing up and taking a while to turn on, tries a few times, chimes etc... And eventually gets there, but quite annoying.
Seems its a common problem to do with cheap capacitors, anyone on here fixed it themselves? Seems I just need a soldering iron and a few replacement capacitors?
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corsa-torque
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Registered: 15th Mar 11
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Yeah simple job, maplins sell the capacitors for about 59p iirc. I'm followed a guide on YouTube.
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Cavey
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Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
User status: Offline
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Thats what I thought, tv shop is charging £20 just to look at it
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corsa-torque
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Registered: 15th Mar 11
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Most places local to me quoted around £80-100 to fix it, make sure you get a soldering iron with a fine tip as it makes life a little easier
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DaveyLC
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Registered: 8th Oct 08
Location: Berkshire
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quote: Originally posted by Cavey
Thats what I thought, tv shop is charging £20 just to look at it
Seriously? A business is going to charge you for their time?? What a rip off!
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Cavey
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Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
User status: Offline
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I didn't say that was a lot, but if its the problem it seems to suggest, I'd rather spend £20 on a soldering iron and a couple of capacitors.
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DaveyLC
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Registered: 8th Oct 08
Location: Berkshire
User status: Offline
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You'll want to replace every cap on the PSU.. You cant tell which ones are buggered without removing them and testing them.
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ed
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Registered: 10th Sep 03
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If they're electrolytic capacitors then you can tell if they've popped by looking at the top of them - they will either be leaking or they'll be domed on the top:
Though if it's a similar sort of problem to the one I had with my first gen Sky HD box, you'll want to do the lot anyway as they use poor quality capacitors on them which caused all sorts of issues.
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DaveyLC
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Registered: 8th Oct 08
Location: Berkshire
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They can still fail without bulging.. I've fixed a fair few PSU's and only a handful have the caps bulged or leaked..
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Cavey
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Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
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From what I've seen on YouTube, they should be bulged. I'm not gonna fuck around with it if I'm not positive, but I'll open it up and have a look at least.
It seems to be a common problem because they used cheap capacitors
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John
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Registered: 30th Jun 03
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There was a bad batch of capacitors years ago, affected loads of stuff. Dell had a motherboard replacement scheme that went on for years and years because of it.
This may or not be related to that.
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DaveyLC
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Registered: 8th Oct 08
Location: Berkshire
User status: Offline
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A lot of it is down to manufacturers using CAP's on spec (instead of over-spec'ing) and the life span is only about 50,000 with nominal load..
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Generation
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Registered: 7th Jul 09
Location: Essex
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Had this on a brand new smart TV, bought from John Lewis and withinf a week it kept turning itself on or off regularly.
Google suggested same things, but as was brand new we just had a replacement
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Cavey
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Registered: 11th Nov 02
Location: Derby
User status: Offline
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Fixed it yesterday, cost £12.80 including the soldering iron kit.
Soldering isn't exactly high quality, but works good as new now
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johnny86
Premium Member
Registered: 15th Feb 10
Location: in a bus stop.
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We had same thing on our 50inch samsung. Sold it as faulty on gumtree to some African then purchased a new 3d smart tv.
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M2RTY
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Registered: 25th May 01
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I done 2 40 inch ones in same house after a lightning stoke
Cost about 4 quid all in from maplins
You can even buy them as a kit on ebay
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