Hi all,
I have a 15 year old Sony KV-27EXR15 TV. Been a super TV for me for
15 years.For the past couple years, when I first power it up (cold), the video flashes on and off about 5 times before it stabilizes and stays on. Its not much of a wait .. probably 15 seconds or less, but could be an indication that the tube is starting to fail ???
The main problem which has just surface in the past few days, is that after having the TV on for a long time (say 5 to 15 hours), the picture and sound will suddenly drop out. From the sounds coming from the set, it sounds as though the set has been turn off, but pressing the power button does activate the relay, and it clunks in and out fine. For now, I push the power button so that I hear it go to the OFF position, and wait 2 or 3 minutes. When I power it up again, the set works fine, for hours ... maybe even the rest of the day. However, the problem has resurfaced many times, so I know its not going away by itself. I'm speculating that their could be a micro fracture in either a solder joint or the PCB around the main power, which is opening and causing the set to act like the power's been turned off. After a short "rest period", the set cools and continuity is restored ... for some random period of time.
I've not been into the back of this TV in the 15 years I've owned it. My only other experience in fixing TVs was to replace a cap in the start up circuit of my 25 year old Sony 19"TV (still working great, but over-scanning), and removing and re-doing every solder joint in the tuner of my Sony 13" portable TV (it now is working fine and is 14 years old).
I did a Google search for this problem on the KV-27EXR15 and didn't come up with an answer. A couple people mentioned the blinking video at cold start up, and on person suggested the Pic Tube was weakening, whilst another thought it might be a bad solder joint.
I've been extremely happy and fortunate to have 3 Sony's, all of which have given me good service, particularly the 25 year old 19" model.
Any thoughtful insites would be appreciated ...
Bill
< cooncat at gmail dot com >