Sony KV-35S36 - is the tube shorted?

  • Thread starter William Buchholz
  • Start date
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William Buchholz

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When I power it up the screen is bright blue with retrace lines. The
picture is barely visible except for some faint outlines. The
voltages on the CRT are the following:
Blue Cathode: 139V
Green Cathode: 206V
Red Cathode: 206V
G1: connected to ground on socket
G2: around 500V but the voltmeter is probably loading this down
Heater: 6V

I tried using my B&K 445 tube tester to see if the tube it shorted. It
tests OK but I don't know if it works properly on Trinitron tubes. I
used an isolated heater supply but it made no difference in the
picture. Switching the red and blue cathodes resulted in a slightly
purple picture but still mostly blue. I would like to know how to
confirm if the blue gun is really shorted out. Thanks.
 
pull the socket and measure the blue cathode again.it being low is causing
the bright blue.
if it returns to normal its the tube.
"William Buchholz" <wmbuchholz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:6a6f10fa.0310081957.167b4217@posting.google.com...
When I power it up the screen is bright blue with retrace lines. The
picture is barely visible except for some faint outlines. The
voltages on the CRT are the following:
Blue Cathode: 139V
Green Cathode: 206V
Red Cathode: 206V
G1: connected to ground on socket
G2: around 500V but the voltmeter is probably loading this down
Heater: 6V

I tried using my B&K 445 tube tester to see if the tube it shorted. It
tests OK but I don't know if it works properly on Trinitron tubes. I
used an isolated heater supply but it made no difference in the
picture. Switching the red and blue cathodes resulted in a slightly
purple picture but still mostly blue. I would like to know how to
confirm if the blue gun is really shorted out. Thanks.
 
I had this exact same model in the shop with a small crack on the CRT board
causing the exact symptom.

Try flexing the board....if not look closely with magnifying loop in bright
lighting.


--
==========================
Jeff Stielau
Shoreline Electronics Repair
344 East Main Street
Clinton,CT 06413
860-399-1861
860-664-3535 (fax)
jstielau@snet.net
========================
"If you push something hard enough it will fall over."
Fudd's First Law of Opposition - Sir Sidney Fudd


"kc8adu" <nospam@spam.sucks> wrote in message
news:voa0041mk876c5@corp.supernews.com...
pull the socket and measure the blue cathode again.it being low is causing
the bright blue.
if it returns to normal its the tube.
"William Buchholz" <wmbuchholz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:6a6f10fa.0310081957.167b4217@posting.google.com...
When I power it up the screen is bright blue with retrace lines. The
picture is barely visible except for some faint outlines. The
voltages on the CRT are the following:
Blue Cathode: 139V
Green Cathode: 206V
Red Cathode: 206V
G1: connected to ground on socket
G2: around 500V but the voltmeter is probably loading this down
Heater: 6V

I tried using my B&K 445 tube tester to see if the tube it shorted. It
tests OK but I don't know if it works properly on Trinitron tubes. I
used an isolated heater supply but it made no difference in the
picture. Switching the red and blue cathodes resulted in a slightly
purple picture but still mostly blue. I would like to know how to
confirm if the blue gun is really shorted out. Thanks.
 
I'm not sure about the model 445 tester, but the 466 (and maybe other BK
units of that era) had an external accessory for checking different gun
designs. I think the adapter had 2 settings, normal/direct, maybe. Directly
heated tube designs were marked in the tube charts.

Sony guns were made differently than most others back then, directly heated
or some other peculiarity.

WB
................

"William Buchholz" <wmbuchholz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:6a6f10fa.0310081957.167b4217@posting.google.com...
When I power it up the screen is bright blue with retrace lines. The
picture is barely visible except for some faint outlines. The
voltages on the CRT are the following:
Blue Cathode: 139V
Green Cathode: 206V
Red Cathode: 206V
G1: connected to ground on socket
G2: around 500V but the voltmeter is probably loading this down
Heater: 6V

I tried using my B&K 445 tube tester to see if the tube it shorted. It
tests OK but I don't know if it works properly on Trinitron tubes. I
used an isolated heater supply but it made no difference in the
picture. Switching the red and blue cathodes resulted in a slightly
purple picture but still mostly blue. I would like to know how to
confirm if the blue gun is really shorted out. Thanks.
 
the only direct heater cathode sony tubes i have seen are in the kv-5xxx
sets.some of the old b&k testers need a special adapter to do common g1 g2
inlines.
"Wild Bill" <kwag98@usachoice.net> wrote in message
news:3f87207f_5@127.0.0.1...
I'm not sure about the model 445 tester, but the 466 (and maybe other BK
units of that era) had an external accessory for checking different gun
designs. I think the adapter had 2 settings, normal/direct, maybe.
Directly
heated tube designs were marked in the tube charts.

Sony guns were made differently than most others back then, directly
heated
or some other peculiarity.

WB
...............

"William Buchholz" <wmbuchholz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:6a6f10fa.0310081957.167b4217@posting.google.com...
When I power it up the screen is bright blue with retrace lines. The
picture is barely visible except for some faint outlines. The
voltages on the CRT are the following:
Blue Cathode: 139V
Green Cathode: 206V
Red Cathode: 206V
G1: connected to ground on socket
G2: around 500V but the voltmeter is probably loading this down
Heater: 6V

I tried using my B&K 445 tube tester to see if the tube it shorted. It
tests OK but I don't know if it works properly on Trinitron tubes. I
used an isolated heater supply but it made no difference in the
picture. Switching the red and blue cathodes resulted in a slightly
purple picture but still mostly blue. I would like to know how to
confirm if the blue gun is really shorted out. Thanks.
 

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