Quote:
Originally Posted by radiotvnut
It's like I tell people, the best lightning protection is to pull the AC plug and disconnect the antenna/cable.
The only time I'll leave a vintage piece of equipment plugged in is if it has been gone over (i.e., new capacitors, good AC cord, etc). I will unplug my vintage equipment if I leave home for an extended period or if there's bad weather. I usually don't leave any vintage equipment in operation unattended. This is especially true of TV's. I've known people to go on vacation for a week or two and they would leave their modern TV's on. Even though modern TV's are newer and are supposed to be safer, I don't advise leaving them on, unattended, fot days or weeks at a time.
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The problem is modern sets are dangerous too in my opinion some modern sets are more of a fire hazard than vintage sets,as a tv serviceman that works on modern and old equipment recently I saw a philips cd/tape/tuner/amp combo that had a standby power supply that was un-fused that went up in smoke due to a shorted FET and due to it being un-fused it melted the input inductor on the board so bad that two pins came unsoldered from the board,thank god for that otherwise it would have caught on fire,I will post pictures of the board if I can find it.Also I have seen power supplies in modern sets notably wally world specials built by orion self destruct violenltly due to poor design or faulty chinese electrolytics.Also I have noticed that sets more prone to this are newer than 1999 not saying it can't happen with any set but that is when they really started to cheapen designs.