Luke McKee
New Member
This is my first post 
I'm not going to be begging for help to be babied all the way. I did Dick Smith Fun-way electronics kits (Australia) as a kid, but when you are working with mains you have to be very careful making the smallest changes to a circuit design. Hence I'm asking for a few tips. Better safe than sorry.....
I've got pretty short dwell times with soldering and know how to use clamp heat-sinks, and I've usually done solid state work modifying router PCB's and setting up outdoor WiFi installation boxes for a hobby. I just don't have a lot of experience working with mains since I was a kid and built a desktop SMPS, and that was 20 years ago based of a reference design from a magazine. Also I've never got into SMT re-working.
I've got around to fixing 2x LCD PSU's as my one blew up last month. The other from an Acer (my wife's) had a very bad day described here:
https://www.repairfaq.org/sam/smpsfaq.htm
Most Common Problems
The following probably account for 95% or more of the common SMPS ailments:
The PWM IC literally exploded and I can't identify what it was, so where I am in Vietnam I passed the whole board off to get a spare from some second hand LCD dealer for a bounty.
The other one I'm working on a Korean imported Taiwanese made 2006 21 Inch LCD PSU, it hasn't got a broken fuse. It's a **broken link removed** (no current specs online, but some similar boards specs / FCC circuit diagram for a 156 model for higher wattage)
https://fccid.io/pdf.php?id=804634
I've bought all the most likely to fail components according to various repair guides, and I can calmly and carefully based on my reference photographs and notes re-assemble the thing. However getting a couple of parts were tricky and I need to know if I can sub two components and ask 1 question.
1) Method: Of course I'll just replace all the secondary caps, but on the first attempt is there any harm in replacing the Semi's as well?
This is my decent LCD and I don't changing all the primary / secondary non-surface mount components first off because it only cost $10-15 bucks to get all of them at the Electronics Market in Vietnam. Yes all parts are correctly rated equivalent spec except for the two below. Considering I already bought the parts, should I just install them all? Let me rephrase the question: if any of the semi's are bad is that going to blow the caps again?
2) It was to difficult to track down am Samxon (tw) 82uf 400V High Temp (105 degrees C8) High Frequency Filter Capacitor (that tested faulty), but I got a new 100uf 450v 105 deg cap, that's slightly larger (but there wont be a clearance problem provided i wrap the pins in heat shrink tubing and fold them under the metal can a little (or not - instead put new heat shrink tubing on the fameproof 2W 5Ohm resister that was behind it, and have less clearance than it did before, which is probably a worse idea).
Is increasing this filter capacitor by a little going to cause any harm provided I carefully check for shorts and install it safely?
3) The bridge rectifier in this unit is 4x **broken link removed**'s & tests Ok with the mulimeter, 450 ~ 500 ohms across all of them, and open when the polarity is reversed. 1N4007's aren't recommended for new design's so can I sub them out too in old designs?
The power supply is meant to be rated for 1.5A. I've got 4x **broken link removed**'s. (marked at 2A in the shop but really 1.5A).
https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/37401/how-are-bridge-rectifiers-rated
Speaking of subbing diodes, is this a safe swap too for a SBD to replace a 20A for a 10A?
https://pdf1.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/view/109837/NIEC/FCH20U15.html
replacing:
**broken link removed**
4) Can I sub a TL-431A for a KIA-431A. The datasheets imply they are pretty much the same. Scratch that they are the same
https://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tl431.pdf
**broken link removed**
I'll appreciate your feedback. Thanks!
I'm not going to be begging for help to be babied all the way. I did Dick Smith Fun-way electronics kits (Australia) as a kid, but when you are working with mains you have to be very careful making the smallest changes to a circuit design. Hence I'm asking for a few tips. Better safe than sorry.....
I've got pretty short dwell times with soldering and know how to use clamp heat-sinks, and I've usually done solid state work modifying router PCB's and setting up outdoor WiFi installation boxes for a hobby. I just don't have a lot of experience working with mains since I was a kid and built a desktop SMPS, and that was 20 years ago based of a reference design from a magazine. Also I've never got into SMT re-working.
I've got around to fixing 2x LCD PSU's as my one blew up last month. The other from an Acer (my wife's) had a very bad day described here:
https://www.repairfaq.org/sam/smpsfaq.htm
Most Common Problems
The following probably account for 95% or more of the common SMPS ailments:
- Supply dead, fuse blown - shorted switchmode power transistor and other semiconductors, open fusable resistors, other bad parts. Note: actual cause of failure may be power surge/brownout/lightning strikes, random failure, or primary side electrolytic capacitor(s) with greatly reduced capacity or entirely open - test them before powering up the repaired unit.
The PWM IC literally exploded and I can't identify what it was, so where I am in Vietnam I passed the whole board off to get a spare from some second hand LCD dealer for a bounty.
The other one I'm working on a Korean imported Taiwanese made 2006 21 Inch LCD PSU, it hasn't got a broken fuse. It's a **broken link removed** (no current specs online, but some similar boards specs / FCC circuit diagram for a 156 model for higher wattage)
https://fccid.io/pdf.php?id=804634
I've bought all the most likely to fail components according to various repair guides, and I can calmly and carefully based on my reference photographs and notes re-assemble the thing. However getting a couple of parts were tricky and I need to know if I can sub two components and ask 1 question.
1) Method: Of course I'll just replace all the secondary caps, but on the first attempt is there any harm in replacing the Semi's as well?
This is my decent LCD and I don't changing all the primary / secondary non-surface mount components first off because it only cost $10-15 bucks to get all of them at the Electronics Market in Vietnam. Yes all parts are correctly rated equivalent spec except for the two below. Considering I already bought the parts, should I just install them all? Let me rephrase the question: if any of the semi's are bad is that going to blow the caps again?
2) It was to difficult to track down am Samxon (tw) 82uf 400V High Temp (105 degrees C8) High Frequency Filter Capacitor (that tested faulty), but I got a new 100uf 450v 105 deg cap, that's slightly larger (but there wont be a clearance problem provided i wrap the pins in heat shrink tubing and fold them under the metal can a little (or not - instead put new heat shrink tubing on the fameproof 2W 5Ohm resister that was behind it, and have less clearance than it did before, which is probably a worse idea).
Is increasing this filter capacitor by a little going to cause any harm provided I carefully check for shorts and install it safely?
3) The bridge rectifier in this unit is 4x **broken link removed**'s & tests Ok with the mulimeter, 450 ~ 500 ohms across all of them, and open when the polarity is reversed. 1N4007's aren't recommended for new design's so can I sub them out too in old designs?
The power supply is meant to be rated for 1.5A. I've got 4x **broken link removed**'s. (marked at 2A in the shop but really 1.5A).
https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/37401/how-are-bridge-rectifiers-rated
Speaking of subbing diodes, is this a safe swap too for a SBD to replace a 20A for a 10A?
https://pdf1.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/view/109837/NIEC/FCH20U15.html
replacing:
**broken link removed**
4) Can I sub a TL-431A for a KIA-431A. The datasheets imply they are pretty much the same. Scratch that they are the same
https://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/tl431.pdf
**broken link removed**
I'll appreciate your feedback. Thanks!