I turned the computer on one day and my screen was flashing like a strobe light. I knew something was majorly wrong. Knowing that it could be several different things, my first guess was the power supply. So I took it apart and to my discovery it was the power supply capacitors. I replaced the capacitors and this fixed this the issue. With shipping and handling, the total repair cost was $12 dollars. I bought extra capacitors just in case this happens again. I also have a friend who has the same monitor and might need a repair in the future as well. If you are not technically inclined enough to repair your own electronic equipment, Please contact me and we can arrange repairs in the United States for a reasonable price. ——– 25v 330uf – www.mouser.com 25v 820uf – www.mouser.com
Posts Tagged ‘ capacitors ’
How to Repair an LCD Monitor
If you turn on your LCD monitor and strange things happen; for instance, all you have to look at is an empty/black screen, or it takes longer and longer for your LCD monitor to start, or the picture is unreadable, replacing the capacitors will probably help restore your LCD monitor back to normal. This video shows how to take apart the LCD monitor, examine the capacitors, remove the capacitors, insert new ones, solder the capacitors in, and put the LCD monitor back together. We have tutorials at www.fixyourmonitor.com and another one at www.lcdalternatives.com
Samsung Syncmaster 226CW LCD Monitor Repair
Capacitors – Fixing an LCD computer monitor
LG Flatron L246WP-BN Monitor Repair Tutorial
My LCD computer monitor quit where LED stopped lighting and would not power on. Video guide shows dis-assembly and repair of broken display. Power supply said LGP0024-110B and was not stocked. The LG/Zenith P/N is 6709900034B or 6709900034E (for LG L246WPQ too). It is available for ~$110 online. I repaired the PS for $5 by replacing bad bulging electrolytic capacitors. Funny they were on +5V circuit and that seemed to work but replacement of caps fixed the problem.
Fixing the Blink problem on the Lilliput monitor with the 5d 60d and t2i. – DSLR FILM NOOB
www.dslrfilmnoob.com So one of the most irritating things about shooting on pretty much any of canon’s camera line (minus the 7d) is that the HDMI port goes from HD to SD when you press the record button. This normally causes most field monitors to blink, but thanks to a little info from dzoemie you don’t have to put up with this blink any longer. If you set your Lilliput monitor to DVI mode the video footage stays in SD output but you get no blink when you press record. The nice thing is that you can use the hdmi port for video output which frees up the usb port for a usb Follow focus. So if you don’t want to use the RCA output on your camera for monitoring then DVI mode on your Lilliput monitor could be handy. Equipment used in this video: Canon t2i & 7d Sigma 28mm f1.8 Canon 35mm f1.4 Sennheiser g2 wireless mic CPM FILM TOOLS RIG