Compaq V710 Monitor not displaying Red

J

Josey

Guest
I have a Compaq V710 Monitor, occasionally it stops displaying red
(everything goes greeny-blue).

A sharp tap usually brings it back so I guess it might be something loose
rather than something failing. It's not under warranty.

If I open it up, what should I be looking for? thanks.

Jc.
 
The very first thing to wiggle and look at is the end that hooks to the
computer. Many times I've seen a flaky situation there that will do just as
you are describing.

WT

"Josey" <nospam@sandwich.ta> wrote in message
news:LwDTa.51519$xd5.2962299@stones.force9.net...
I have a Compaq V710 Monitor, occasionally it stops displaying red
(everything goes greeny-blue).

A sharp tap usually brings it back so I guess it might be something loose
rather than something failing. It's not under warranty.

If I open it up, what should I be looking for? thanks.

Jc.
 
Jc:
The must common faults of a missing color are:
1. A break in the color video signal wire within the video cable.
This usually occurs near the end that connects to the computer.
Try bending the cable and see if the color comes back.
You can purchase new 15 pin ends at Radio Shack and solder a new
end on the cable.
2. A bad solder connection at the socket where the CRT circuit board
plugs onto the back of the picture tube. Just resolder the connections.
3. A bad video driver transistor or driver IC that supplies the color
signals to the picture tube. Measure the voltages on the three color
signal connections on the picture tube socket. The missing one will
usually be very different.
I would download a standard color bar program from the web to determine
which color is actually missing. There are also pinouts on the web that
indicate which pins do what functions on the picture tube socket.
Hope this helps...
John
 
"John Gill" <jdgill@juno.com> wrote in message
news:71016e83.0307240554.29850112@posting.google.com...
Jc:
The must common faults of a missing color are:
1. A break in the color video signal wire within the video cable.
This usually occurs near the end that connects to the computer.
Try bending the cable and see if the color comes back.
You can purchase new 15 pin ends at Radio Shack and solder a new
end on the cable.
2. A bad solder connection at the socket where the CRT circuit board
plugs onto the back of the picture tube. Just resolder the connections.
3. A bad video driver transistor or driver IC that supplies the color
signals to the picture tube. Measure the voltages on the three color
signal connections on the picture tube socket. The missing one will
usually be very different.
I would download a standard color bar program from the web to determine
which color is actually missing. There are also pinouts on the web that
indicate which pins do what functions on the picture tube socket.
Hope this helps...
John
Thanks.

Jc
 

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