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Old 02-27-2010, 10:44 AM
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cdmarion cdmarion is offline
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My original problem started while bench testing the unit after recapping. I had it on for about an hour and went up to check on it, I noticed the dreaded burnt smell and had no raster, I also noticed a sizzling noise, when I looked in the the HV cage I noticed a blue arc. The anode wire was arcing at the 1B3/flyback terminal. It had also been arcing at the 1B3 tube socket, so the socket and the anode was toast.

I did consider splittling the wafer and even did so on a bad socket, I think this would work if you could come up with a good way to put it back together, perhaps the epoxy might be worth a try.

I ended up removing a socket from a spare parts chassis I had laying around, this had 8 terminals on the bottom, after some head scratching I ended up just bending the unwanted terminals back and forth until they broke, and they broke inside the socket so nothing was sticking out. So that was an easy soloution. I desoldered everything, replaced the socket installed a new anode wire and fired it up.......No smoke, good picture and everything at the moment is working great.

Check out the pic's.
Attached Images
File Type: jpg DSC00860.JPG (145.2 KB, 32 views)
File Type: jpg DSC00859.JPG (144.8 KB, 33 views)
File Type: jpg DSC00858.JPG (138.5 KB, 37 views)
File Type: jpg DSC00861.JPG (143.6 KB, 35 views)

Last edited by cdmarion; 02-27-2010 at 11:53 AM.
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Old 02-27-2010, 11:46 AM
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Phil Nelson Phil Nelson is offline
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I love those easy solutions. I bet a couple of dabs of good two-part epoxy would hold the wafers together if you tried the splitting solution. Save that trick for next time.

Nice looking chassis -- and screen image!

Phil Nelson
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  #3  
Old 02-27-2010, 12:48 PM
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TubeType TubeType is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by cdmarion View Post
My original problem started while bench testing the unit after recapping. I had it on for about an hour and went up to check on it, I noticed the dreaded burnt smell and had no raster, I also noticed a sizzling noise, when I looked in the the HV cage I noticed a blue arc. The anode wire was arcing at the 1B3/flyback terminal. It had also been arcing at the 1B3 tube socket, so the socket and the anode was toast.

I did consider splittling the wafer and even did so on a bad socket, I think this would work if you could come up with a good way to put it back together, perhaps the epoxy might be worth a try.

I ended up removing a socket from a spare parts chassis I had laying around, this had 8 terminals on the bottom, after some head scratching I ended up just bending the unwanted terminals back and forth until they broke, and they broke inside the socket so nothing was sticking out. So that was an easy soloution. I desoldered everything, replaced the socket installed a new anode wire and fired it up.......No smoke, good picture and everything at the moment is working great.

Check out the pic's.
The original anode lead, in the first photo, appears to be RG-172/U coaxial cable. That may have been the cause of your original problem.

Regards,
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