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#1
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Zenith Chromacolor II (Ch. 19EC45) 19" color tabletop TV repair log
I've been looking for a delta gun Chromacolor set for a little while, and one such set ended up following me home!
I was out of town for the Thanksgiving holiday visiting family, and decided to visit an antiques store I spotted on the interstate. Fate was on my side, as this set was waiting for me...it was so cheap I just decided to grab it and go.It's in pretty good cosmetic condition, a bit of wear on the front panel and a power cord that appears to be oozing some sort of green, sticky goo that absolutely does not wash off, but nothing else of note. (What is this goo from? My ~1957 Zenith tube type set's wiring is suffering the same ailment, some sort of chemical produced by decomposing insulation?) Anyway, I pulled the back off to check the CRT - it tests excellent, and the G2 voltage pots reflect this (a half turn to 3/4 turn from max). So if worst comes to worst, we can at least get a good picture tube from the set. Unfortunately...it still has all the original white HV safety caps which are known to have a high failure rate, and upon further inspection, one apparently blew open at some point in the past. I'm pretty sure this is the reason the set was retired, it probably scared the hell out of the original owner too. It also appears the vertical output fuse is blown open, which makes me wonder if anything else was taken out as collateral.At this point, I've decided to put the set back together and shelve it for a rainy day...need to order the replacement caps (22-5001, apparently 0.0018uF at 1.6Kv) as well as go through and make sure none of the major components (horizontal output transistor comes to mind) are shorted. If anyone else has this set and/or its schematics, I'd be infinitely grateful if you could provide the value of that vertical fuse as I was unsuccessful in removing the old fuse from its casing. More to come soon, hopefully. This set is a bit of a back burner project until I can finish the other sets I've made threads on as well (Zenith tube type tabletop, filthy and beat-up RCA tube portable), but I plan to start work on it as soon as I can.
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When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
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#2
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One of these is my repair bench TV...Mine still works and has never received anything but 'percussive maintenance'...Which it has been needing more frequently the last few years.
IIRC the chassis is 19HC-something...If you post the chassis number I may b able to scan the Zenith issues schematic.
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Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#3
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Quote:
__________________
When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
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#4
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Quote:
I gotta not post late so I don't miss things like chassis number in the title.
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#5
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Its an E4025W early production probably sold in 1973.
Uses separate caps instead of one 4 lead cap. IIRC there are 5 in the set. Look behind chassis, flyback & behind the horz output. Change them all at once unless they are orange. IIRC vert fuse is 400 ma. See tag near fuse. If you change the module you can use a 9-92 or the updated & better 9-147. 73 Zeno ![]() LFOD ! |
| Audiokarma |
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#6
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Quote:
The tag near the fuse just advises me to replace the fuse with an authentic Zenith factory replacement or damage might occur...that helps me a whole lot. ![]() Hmm, the tip on the updated vertical module is interesting. I'd prefer to fix what's there, but if I come across a whole bunch of fried components, I'll definitely see if I can find one. Thanks!
__________________
When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
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#7
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Well it's in Sam's 1377-3 which I don't have, and my Zenith issued manual is on loan to a friend based on the sticky note on the manual so I can't help you any time soon...
I know why 19HC was in my head now...I parted a 19HC45 out and was considering using the modules to build something.
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#8
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Good news, it's alive!
I finished the project that had been occupying my bench for a good few weeks (recapping and repairing corroded traces on a Panasonic Travelvision 1.5" portable set from the early 80s), so I figured I'd dig the Zenith out and attempt to get it running again. I decided to go the ghetto route and just parallel six of my .0018uF caps together into a sort of "flower" formation and tack them to the back of the flyback for easier access. In the future I'll likely order the "correct" part, but I'm really cheap and this solution works just as well. I also replaced the vertical fuse - it is a 250V, 0.6 amp part for anyone who might have this problem in the future. Fingers crossed and prayers said, I hit the power...it came right up! Everything was horribly misadjusted, but after a bit of tweaking I was able to get a pretty respectable picture out of it. However, that victory was short lived. I was tweaking convergence and focus when the picture suddenly started shrinking, followed by the circuit breaker popping. It now does not stay on for more than a few seconds before the breaker pops again, so I've stopped powering it on to prevent damaging something. I have yet to dig into the set, but I suspect the big oil cap went open. It appears to be original, and according to a few videos I've watched it is a moderate failure rate part. More soon...
__________________
When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
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#9
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First you have to use the right caps for the 22-5001 or they will
short. See old threads for subs. Hum then quick breaker pop is almost always the caps, damper, hoz out or shorted oil cap. Longer pop ( apx 10-15 sec ) the tripler. Quick checks are unsolder one end of oil cap. If the cap opens the pix will pulsate but work. For H out just hang an ohm meter on the H. out collector to GND. Should be in the megs. If shorted unscrew the H. out ( 121-831 ). Then the damper ( 103-193 ) then caps etc...... Dont run with any hoz parts unloaded. Oil cap you can run without a short time. Last hint for now is all the original boards have plug in semis. The sockets will get intermitant especially the IC sockets on the 9-86 color board. 73 Zeno ![]() LFOD ! |
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#10
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Quote:
![]() Thanks for the troubleshooting tips, after I get the proper cap I'll start going through all the possible failures. I hope it's the oil cap, but it really could be anything.
__________________
When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
| Audiokarma |
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#11
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800-860 is the kit for this chassis when it uses a 4 lead cap.
I never did the math on the mfd value so be sure. The cap has 2 pairs of leads that each pair read a short. One pair is used to complete the emitter circuit, the other the collector. If the HV goes too high they open & kill the HV. Personally I would stick with the 22-5001 or a proper sub. 73 Zeno ![]() LFOD ! |
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#12
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I worked on dozens of them, when they were relatively new. Two other components to check; the damper diode under the horizontal output socket, and the feedthrough capacitor in the collector circuit of that transistor. For a quick check of the tripler, disconnect the output lead of the flyback transformer from the tripler, making sure to space the wire well away from anything that it could arc to. Apply power; if the breaker now holds, the tripler is shorted.
Also check the electrolytic capacitor and the rectifier diodes for shorts. I have many modules for that chassis, if you should need any. Last edited by Tim Tress; 01-08-2020 at 07:23 PM. |
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#13
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Quote:
__________________
Tom C. Zenith: The quality stays in EVEN after the name falls off! What I want. --> http://www.videokarma.org/showpost.p...62&postcount=4 |
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#14
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It's been a while since I posted about this set (or on VK in general) so I thought I'd give an update! It was sitting in storage for a while and I finally decided to properly fix it since I know how well these sets perform and it's one of the sets in my collection I like the most.
I replaced all of the white safety caps with the one large four lead cap I soldered to the back of the flyback. It works fine so my math is correct, they do all add up to 0.01uF. The breaker tripping/shrinking picture problem was indeed the oil cap in the PS as a few here suggested. It was getting untouchably hot before the breaker tripped. Mounted a new 3.5uF motor run cap, problem solved. I also went ahead and replaced all the small electrolytics on the modules, resoldered some questionable joints and re-tensioned all the connectors and went over the convergence, just general preventative maintenance stuff. And I am pleased to announce it works amazingly well! I think it is one of the best looking color sets in my collection and I am very glad this set finally has a happy ending. ![]() There is ONE more problem I will need to figure out once I procure (or borrow) a high voltage probe. I suspect it is producing excessive HV as even after thoroughly cleaning under the anode cap and the surrounding bell of the tube, it makes a continuous hissing sound and produces a lot of ozone. I've confirmed it's coming from the anode as bringing a screwdriver near it exacerbates the hissing sound, and once or twice I even got an extremely nasty arc that shot out from underneath the cap! The plastic does seem to be decomposing some (getting sticky and oily), so maybe it's becoming conductive? I also noticed the focus control needs to be at its extreme end for the picture to look good, so maybe that also indicates high voltage outside normal operating range? I know focus is often derived from the anode voltage though I am unfamiliar with whether or not that's true with this set specifically - I never did find a schematic for it. I will update if and when I figure that out, but for now the set works well and I am not extremely concerned.
__________________
When you lower your standards, you set a new standard! ISO: Mitsubishi 6CT-338, Sony Chromatron 19C70/100, Yaou "Colornetron" GTC-9, etc... |
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#15
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Clean up the HV cap and seal it with some clear RTV (the stinky stuff) and the problem will go away.
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| Audiokarma |
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