Monday, March 26, 2012

Hitachi 26AX10BC chassis M1CLUX-H TV vertical foldover fix

This is a Hitachi CRT TV from 1995, model 26AX10BC with chassis M1CLUX-H. When first turned on, the top of the image is vertically stretched, upside down, and overlapping at the top of the screen. This means the vertical retrace does not finish before it's time to start displaying the next field. It's called vertical foldover. Here's a picture. (Sorry, it's just a blue screen, so you can't see how the overlapping part is upside down.)
After a few minutes, the problem area starts shrinking, and after about 10 minutes it's gone. However, it always comes back if the TV has been off for a while. This makes it seem like the problem goes away when some component warms up.

It's an easy fix. However, note that the internals can retain dangerous voltages even when the TV is off. They could maybe even kill you. Make sure you understand what you're getting yourself into. Read about the risks and how to stay safe, intelligently decide whether to do this yourself, and be very careful.

The back is pretty easy to remove. Many screws around the edge connect it to the plastic front, and three screws above the back connector panel connect it to the main board assembly. The TV can stand on just the plastic front, so the back can be removed while it is upright. I kept it near the edge of a workbench. This allowed access to the screw at the bottom, and when the back was removed it allowed access to the bottom of the main board. That position seems precarious, but the TV is not too close to tipping over. Make sure that the table is not close to tipping over. Also, when removing the back, make sure that it does not fall and strike the board at the back of the picture tube neck. If you need a service manual, the 27AX5BX manual will probably suffice.

Here is a the main board. It is on rails, and held to the front plastic with two screws at either side. If you unscrew those, you can slide the board out a bit for better access to the bottom. It's worth doing that, because working on the bottom is much easier then. You could even unplug cables and take the board out, but it's not necessary for access to the vertical deflection circuit.
The vertical deflection chip is attached to the C shaped heat sink that's just above where the red high voltage cable bends first after exiting the flyback transformer. Here is a closeup of the area:
You can easily see the brown ring on the top of C625 (47µF/16V) the closest electrolytic capacitor on the right inside the heat sink. That's electrolyte leakage and the capacitor is bad. Another suspect is C627 (100µF/35V on the schematic, with a 50V capacitor installed) the larger and darker capacitor to the left near the nut and bolt attaching the chip to the heat sink. There is a darker area on the circuit board below, like a puddle.

C627 is the pump-up capacitor for the LA7838 vertical deflection chip, and it is the main suspect. It is part of a charge pump. The chip first connects the capacitor to the power supply to charge it, and then it connects the capacitor in series with the power supply, to provide twice the power supply voltage. This higher voltage is used to quickly move the beam back to the top. A problem with the capacitor will mean less power is available for moving the beam back to the top. This will slow down the move, and the beam won't be able to reach the top before it's time to start displaying the next frame. C625 The small capacitor with the brown ring is a power supply filtering capacitor. It could contribute to the problem if the power supply dips when the vertical deflection chip uses a lot of current.

When I looked under the board, I saw a surprise. The trace between the pump-up capacitor and the chip was missing, and one of the capacitor leads was used to make the connection. This plus the different look of C627 made me wonder if this was a previous repair. Could the pump-up capacitor be good, and could the puddle-like mark on the board be from a failed previous pump-up capacitor?
The Yubright capacitor brand and the nature of the failure made me curious, so I tested the ESR of the pump-up capacitor. Although the capacitor still had most of its capacity, the ESR was ridiculously high, and so the capacitor was obviously bad. There was no need to test the small capacitor, because it was leaking badly. After I removed it, there were drops of electrolyte on it.

After cleaning the board and replacing C625 and C627, the TV worked properly. I chose to not replace more capacitors. Yes, it's probable that some other ones are degraded, but there are very many and it's not worth the effort. The real problem here is that a lot of electrolytic capacitors are located very close to heat sinks. Hitachi even used 85°C capacitors there!

2 comments:

kourampies said...

Hello,

I got a Hitachi CP2886TAN for using with MAME (Check CRT Emudriver over SCART, you can get SCART tvs to behave like real arcade monitors) and Its not turning on. It tries to turn on and it switches back to standby, or in the best case scenario,, stays on for a few seconds, and then shuts down again.

I ve googled and read alot about common problems, and I reached the conclusion that its probably a popped capacitor or some bad soldering, caused by the very stupid positioning of heatsinks by hitachi.

While in theory I know what to do, I suck horribly at soldering and mending, and Im really afraid of the CRT charge. I never did a CRT discharge, and Im really scared of doing it.

But since In my town theres probably noone (trustworthy) willing to repair it, I was thinking of trying myself, since this Is a really nice monitor for what I want to do.

Do you think I could easily and safely remove the PCB/board and try to do the repair away from the CRT and its charge, or bring just the pcb to someone who can solder better than me?

Do you have any suggestions or tips for me?

Thanks for your time!

Boris Gjenero said...

Take a look at Sam's TV Repair FAQ. You'll find a lot of helpful information there.

The C2886 service manual is probably also usable for your TV