D
Dr Hugh M. Aye
Guest
Hi guys,
About a year ago, my mother moved house and her Panasonic TX-28LD1/M set
started displaying problems soon after - I can only assume that it received
a little bump during the move.
The problem is that the picture is very red where it's supposed to be red -
i.e., people's faces look radioactive. It's just about bearable (my
mother's been stubbornly putting up with it all this time), but it gets a
lot worse when a DVD or video is playing - the red areas are VERY red, and
the green areas are VERY green too.
She's one of these people that thinks that you throw electronic stuff away
and buy a replacement when the old one shows defects, so she's been saving
to buy a new set for the past year. I've finally snapped and decided to see
how much it'd cost to repair before she goes throwing money around. Does
anyone have a rough idea what might be wrong with it? Doesn't seem like a
fatal flaw to me, but I just want to have a rough idea of what to expect
before I go phoning up any TV repair places.
Many thanks,
Dr Aye.
About a year ago, my mother moved house and her Panasonic TX-28LD1/M set
started displaying problems soon after - I can only assume that it received
a little bump during the move.
The problem is that the picture is very red where it's supposed to be red -
i.e., people's faces look radioactive. It's just about bearable (my
mother's been stubbornly putting up with it all this time), but it gets a
lot worse when a DVD or video is playing - the red areas are VERY red, and
the green areas are VERY green too.
She's one of these people that thinks that you throw electronic stuff away
and buy a replacement when the old one shows defects, so she's been saving
to buy a new set for the past year. I've finally snapped and decided to see
how much it'd cost to repair before she goes throwing money around. Does
anyone have a rough idea what might be wrong with it? Doesn't seem like a
fatal flaw to me, but I just want to have a rough idea of what to expect
before I go phoning up any TV repair places.
Many thanks,
Dr Aye.