This is were I found it. I only remembered to take a picture when I already put the thing into my car. It was laying tube down on the fridge.
This was also my first time working on a CRT. Was kinda scary, but nothing happened in the end. Not even a spark when discharging. Guess these newer sets all have a resistor that drains the voltage built in (this TV is from November of 2002).
The power cable uses a connector, so I could just remove the cable and solder a new one to it. Soldering it directly to the board would have probably looked cleaner, but I guess this worked well too. I simply cut off one end of a normal power cable and soldered it to what was left of the existing one. I planned on using heatshrink tubes, but they already shrinked while soldering. I just ended up using electrical tape instead. Not the cleanest soldering work, but it does the job.
This is how it ended up looking inside the TV:
I wanted to be on the safe side when turning the CRT on for the first time, so I did it outside.
It did power on, and looks pretty damn good!
As it turns out, the tube was actually made in the UK. I think that’s pretty cool, since everything has to be made as cheaply as possible today. The whole thing seems very well built in general, Rubycon capacitors everywhere.
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Of course I don’t have the remote for it, so I didn’t change any setting when taking these pictures. The black levels were still pretty bad, and geometry could be better as well. I ordered a remote to dial everything in, I hope it looks even better after that.
Would it be an option to connect both wires using 2 WAGO clamps? Less messy and less to worry about soldering work.
Good question. Now that I think about it, that should have worked well too. If they’re rated for 230V and that 52W power consumption, there shouldn’t be anything to worry about.
Though with the way its now, its probably fine too. You see, while my soldering work was anything but good, there’s a stress relief inside the case so that even when you pull the cable, it’s not gonna move in the inside. So I don’t think that connection is gonna get loose.
Still, good suggestion nonetheless. It would have probably been the easier choice for a soldering beginner like myself.
It’s a nice and easy way to practice some soldering 🙂