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#1
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I don't know your tech's skill set, but if he's right, then keep a lookout for a tube. At this age, people are looking to dump these TVs for free and you should be able to find one fairly easily. It's new enough not to be a classic and old enough to be a pain to store. Now, getting back to the TV, a shortcut to finding out if the tube is cranky is to turn the chroma off and see if the B&W picture is normal or not. See if the gray scale can be adjusted and see if raising the blue drive in the serv menu causes premature flaring compared to the red and green. If it does, swap the blue wire for either the red or green at the CRT socket and reset your gray scale, again checking by eye for the strength of the blue gun. If the problem stays the same (again, leave the color off), then the problem is either the tube or something on the CRT socket (rare). If the problem switches guns, then the big jungle IC on the main board is the most likely culprit. If the problem seems to be at the tube, check the resistor between the kine output transistor and the cathode pin, usually something in the 2K range. I've seen this happen in Zeniths where that resistor goes bad and does a fine job of simulating a bad tube. John |
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#2
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The tech is probably up against a not 100% provable cause. Proving it
would probably be an in shop repair. I can think of MANY good reasons he wouldnt want to go there. Keep in mind you want to make a good B&W first. Like John said keep the color OFF while you troubleshoot it. One other thing you can try. If there is a very low ohm resistor ( 1-3 ohm 1-2 w) in SERIES with the filament jump it out & see if it improves. If it does its the CRT 99%. As with cleaning there is a tiny risk to the CRT doing this. 73 Zeno ![]() LFOD ! |
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