NCD NC2082BA too bright

I've got one of these monitors sitting here. Picture looks good except it's too bright. User brightness control has no effect. Anyone run into this one?

Reply to
James Sweet
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"James Sweet" wrote in news:e00Ej.11784$u62.9949@trndny07:

Google for "monitor too bright" There are plenty of similar problems (over half a million). NC2082BA monitor too bright brings three hits.

Good luck.

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bz

please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an 
infinite set.

bz+spr@ch100-5.chem.lsu.edu   remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap
Reply to
bz

This is the very first thing I did of course, as it always is and not finding anything relevant (those three hits are for a pay site) I posted here. I guess I need to create a sig file that says "yes I googled it already". I spent an hour poking around in the monitor, narrowed it down to the circuit between the MCU board and the G1 wire, checked the semis and they were fine, started checking lytics and found a bunch of bad ones so I gave up and scrapped it. I hate to do that but I couldn't get a dime for it even in working condition so it's not worth further effort to replace a pile of caps and see if it works then.

Reply to
James Sweet

"James Sweet" wrote in news:4sbEj.12277$FK1.2488@trndny08:

I don't remember the site or thread but do recall reading a long thread about monitor too bright. Some monitors were fixed by running the software setup 'color calibration'. Some were fixed by REDUCING the resistance of a resistor in a [bias?] circuit.

There were quite a few people talking about different things they tried.

The root cause seems to be drifting of the screen bias due to component aging.

I see good, working monitors going into the dumpster because people want flat screens.

It is a throw away society and someday they will throw us away.

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bz    	73 de N5BZ k

please pardon my infinite ignorance, the set-of-things-I-do-not-know is an 
infinite set.

bz+ser@ch100-5.chem.lsu.edu   remove ch100-5 to avoid spam trap
Reply to
bz

Yes those are the usual suspects, however in this case it wasn't simply a case of too bright, it was that the front panel control had very little range. I could turn down the G2 and get the brightness ok at one resolution but then it would be too dim at another. What I did find on these monitors is that they're notorious for having loads of bad capacitors, and that was supported by my limited probing around with an ESR meter so that would be the place to start. This is/was an 11 year old shadow mask monitor with a rounded tube, and numerous gashes and scuffs in the case, I'm not sure I could even give it away working, much less get anything for it, and with the huge backlog of broken crap taking up space, sometimes I have to give up and salvage what useful parts I can, even if it means paying to dispose of the rest. My plan with this, as I occasionally do, was to fix it and try to give it away, there's only so much time that I can devote to one of those. I'd rather put the time into saving a late model 22" flat CRT, I love them but even those are getting hard to get rid of.

Reply to
James Sweet

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