Monitor switches off on its own

I have a monitor that used to work fine, but now when the computer starts up, the monitor switches off immediately, without even showing the bios screens. If I unplug it from the computer it shows the "signal not found" screen fine. Once I plug it in again, it switches off immediately.

The monitor is a LG Studioworks 700S. I tried it on other computers and it showed the same behaviour. It's out of warranty, is there any hope of getting it fixed?

Reply to
qwerty
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Reply to
Rich Barry

I have a monitor that used to work fine, but now when the computer starts up, the monitor switches off immediately, without even showing the bios screens. If I unplug it from the computer it shows the "signal not found" screen fine. Once I plug it in again, it switches off immediately.

The monitor is a LG Studioworks 700S. I tried it on other computers and it showed the same behaviour. It's out of warranty, is there any hope of getting it fixed?

Reply to
qwerty

I have a monitor that used to work fine, but now when the computer starts up, the monitor switches off immediately, without even showing the bios screens. If I unplug it from the computer it shows the "signal not found" screen fine. Once I plug it in again, it switches off immediately.

The monitor is a LG Studioworks 700S. I tried it on other computers and it showed the same behaviour. It's out of warranty, is there any hope of getting it fixed?

Reply to
JAD

WhenI think of black screens, there are several things that can be the cuprit. I'll list them here for informational purposes but I'm assuming this is a CRT (Big Tube) type display. since you indicate it has a power saving feature. Unless you are knowledgeable about the extremely high voltage components (20,000 + Volts) inside, DO NOT ATTEMPT TO FIX IT ON YOUR OWN AS THE DANGEROUS COMPONENTS INSIDE can hurt you.

List of Culprits

  1. VESA power saving feature, See:
    formatting link
    These components are designed to turn your screen black (turn off the High Voltage) when they cannot detect missing horizontal and vertical synchronization signals coming from your video card. But since, the monitor knows you pulled the cord and displays it's internal video message "signal not found". I would say this is NOT THE CULPRIT.
  2. High Voltage failure will cause a black screen. Since you are able to get a "signal not found" message tells me this is NOT THE CULPRIT"
  3. Too much high voltage (transformer circuit creating the high voltage goes into a runaway state, an X-ray safe shut off feature intended to shut off the monitor as it nears 30,000 volts). Again, since you are able to get a "signal not found" message tells me this is NOT THE CULPRIT"
  4. Video from the display card is dropped somewhere in the early stages as it arrives in the monitor. There are 3-video connectors that provide the full range of colors, so I don't think it's a connector issue, but possible video circuit malfunctioning in the early stages of circuitry, but since the internally injected video signal "signal not found" is displayed it has to be in the very early stages of video circuitry. If you get a black screen, yet are still able to get some background lighting when you turn on contrast/ brightness controls to maximum, I usually start tracking down the video path with an oscilloscope. (POSSIBLE CULPRIT).

Good luck, but my recommendation with the low price of monitors today, you'd be good to trash this device, and purchase a low powered flat screen monitor. The power you save in the long run will pay for the cost of the new monitor.

Take care..

Albert

Reply to
albertpopp

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