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I have a Sony Wega KV-32HS510 TV. We've never had any problem with it. Last night when I got home, it would not turn on and the standby light was blinking repeatedly in a 4-blink pattern.
I went online and looked up what the problem was and found that the 4 blinks means the following: Vertical deflection stopped. Possible causes: +- 15V is not supplied. (D board), IC8003 is faulty. (A board) Symptoms of the problem: TV has entered standby state after horizontal raster, Vertical deflection pulse is stopped, Power line is shorted or power supply is stopped.
Okey dokey. Obviously not something that I can fix (or even know the meaning of), so we gave up and went to bed. This morning, I was able to turn the TV on like nothing had happened.
I decided to test it, so I turned it off for about a half an hour. When I went to turn it back on, I now get 7 blinks to the pattern. According to research, this means: Horizontal deflection stopped. Possible cause: Q8035, 8038 is shorted. (D board)
So, I'm wondering if anyone knows:
1. What does this mean?? Please, simple layman's terms.
2. Is this something worth fixing? Or should we cut our losses and buy a new one? The TV's about 6 years old, and weighs about 170 lbs... I think we got the heaviest possible tube TV.
3. If we do decide to get rid of it, do you think it would be worth anything to anyone else - like someone who tinkers w/electronics?
In my limited experience, fixes to replace boards on my Sony TVs usually run $100-200 for the parts and labor. Is it worth that much to you to get a few more years out of this TV?
In my limited experience, fixes to replace boards on my Sony TVs usually run $100-200 for the parts and labor. Is it worth that much to you to get a few more years out of this TV?
That's the million $ question. When I was researching this online last night, I ended up on a really techy message board. Apparently, the board that I need would run $250 w/o labor. These people were all fixing the stuff themselves - which I am not going to attempt. There were a few that were having the same issue as I am, and they replaced the board only to have more problems. I've always been partial to Sony TV's... I have a 20" in the bedroom that's got to be pushing 15+ years old. Maybe they don't make them like they used to...
That's the million $ question. When I was researching this online last night, I ended up on a really techy message board. Apparently, the board that I need would run $250 w/o labor. These people were all fixing the stuff themselves - which I am not going to attempt. There were a few that were having the same issue as I am, and they replaced the board only to have more problems. I've always been partial to Sony TV's... I have a 20" in the bedroom that's got to be pushing 15+ years old. Maybe they don't make them like they used to...
About 3 years ago, I had the PIP board bypassed, rather than replaced on a 1995-vintage Sony TV. The TV's still humming along fine, but without that board, the PIP feature no longer works. No great loss there, and I haven't regretted paying for the fix.
We had a similar problem with out Mitsubishi and it was a programming circuit problem. Luckily we had purchased the warranty, which we usually do not, and it was covered. It took about 5 minutes to fix.
I have a Sony Wega KV-32HS510 TV. We've never had any problem with it. Last night when I got home, it would not turn on and the standby light was blinking repeatedly in a 4-blink pattern.
(snip)
So, I'm wondering if anyone knows:
1. What does this mean?? Please, simple layman's terms.
2. Is this something worth fixing? Or should we cut our losses and buy a new one? The TV's about 6 years old, and weighs about 170 lbs... I think we got the heaviest possible tube TV.
3. If we do decide to get rid of it, do you think it would be worth anything to anyone else - like someone who tinkers w/electronics?
Any help at all would be wonderful!!!
I just gave away a 32" Sony Wega TV due to it being all dark for the picture until I turned it on/off once. Set was fine but since the set is now 5+ years old it's time to move on to a HDTV flat screen. I'm sure that once failures start on the older Analog CRT sets (Wega et.al.) it's not a good idea to even try to repair them.
What is largely unknown to the general public is that Cable/Sat carriers are only required , by law, to down convert the digital TV signal to Analog until Jan. 2012 at which time then can stop if they want to to allow time for most of the public to switch to HDTV's (they didn't count on the recession) .
So my suggestion is to buy a HDTV now instead of putting another dime into that trusty Sony analog set. I will also suggest that you buy a simple HDTV this time since the HDTV market is still way, way to much in flux today.
I have a sony Trinitron I had problems with it before it got even worse,I had to turn it on twice in order to keep it on and then the screen was keep getting dark many times before it gets stable I asked for help from online chat Sony they told me to reset the TV .Now it takes me 45 to an hour to sit down and keep push the power botten to have the tv on.Does it worth to have it repaired.The TV is about 7 years old.
I have a sony Trinitron I had problems with it before it got even worse,I had to turn it on twice in order to keep it on and then the screen was keep getting dark many times before it gets stable I asked for help from online chat Sony they told me to reset the TV .Now it takes me 45 to an hour to sit down and keep push the power botten to have the tv on.Does it worth to have it repaired.The TV is about 7 years old.
NO! Move on to a flat screen.
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