10 days of anguish - the story of my first major, not-so-trivial repair of consumer electronics.

Thread Starter

aromring

Joined Jul 22, 2015
28
Day 0:
It's late April and a cute coworker of mine is in despair. She brings her broken Philips DVD player (DVP642, like this) to the office in hope that someone might help her. What's so special about 11-year old DVD player? - you might ask. Just throw it away and buy a new one; these are not expensive, right? Well, what's special about this particular player is the fact that it's easily hackable. She entered a special code years ago, made it region-free, and ever since can play movies from all over the world in both NTSC and PAL formats. It's particularly golden for someone like her who likes foreign movies. One of such rare foreign discs is now stuck in the drawer which doesn't want to open. "Help me" - she pleads - "at this point I don't care if you have to break apart the player, just get my disc out!". All right, since I have a few simple tools in my office I sit down, unscrew the drawer, and after 1 minutes figure out how to open it manually by shifting a white plastic guide at the bottom. "Here it is" - I hand over the disc.

That would be over for most people, but not for me. About a week ago I passed the final exam in the last part of the 3-part on-line course in basic electronics - my new hobby. I am so empowered and bursting with circuit theory that feel a primal need to turn all this new knowledge into practice. "Tell you what" - I tell my colleague - "I'll fix your player at no charge. I truly need to practice my new skills in the real world. Your broken Philips is an excellent object!" Fortunately, she agrees and I take the player home.

Day 1:
From what I gather, the DVD player worked fine for 10 years, then started acting up: the drawer would open only half way, for example. Sometimes it wouldn't turn on. Finally, it completely gave up with the dreaded blinking power light. Even the front display stays blank.

Initially, the repair seems easy. I already know that the main reason why consumer electronics breaks is limited life of electrolytic capacitors, especially in high temperature environment:

http://www.markdigital.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/bulging_capacitors.jpg
https://www.geeksinphoenix.com/blog/images/Computer_Randomly_Freezes_Up_01.jpg

The electrolyte gradually dries up, or boils out, the ESR shoots up, while capacity dives down. Often this happens because manufacturers place capacitors next to hot elements, like transistors or power resistors… No, it's not about bad design, it's all about obsolescence _by_ design. More on this later.

I google DVP642 up and sure enough, here pops up this YouTube video.

Turns out, a bad 1000 microF capacitor, C316, in a switched mode power supply is the culprit responsible for failure of many DVP642's. I take a closer look at the power supply board it's LVP103850. C316 looks fine. It's C310, a 470 uF capacitor on the +12V line that is bulging. "Easy!" - I think. But when I replace it with a new, good one … the DVD player still doesn't turn on. Hmmm, it's more complicated than I thought.

To be continued.
 

SLK001

Joined Nov 29, 2011
1,549
A capacitor doesn't have to bulge to be bad. It's probably cheaper in terms of time to just replace all the big electros in the PS. A lot of these problems are caused by counterfeit parts getting into the supply chain. You, of course, did measure the outputs of the PS to find out which supply was bad, didn't you?
 

Thread Starter

aromring

Joined Jul 22, 2015
28
Day 2
Time to learn more about switched mode power supplies. Indeed, capacitors fail most often, but trouble may be caused by bad diodes, transistors, and so on. I desolder C316, just in case, and replace it with a new capacitor with higher voltage rating. Fortunately, I find service manual for DVP642 with all schematics, here:

http://www.eserviceinfo.com/downloadsm/60875/PHILIPS_DVP630, DVP632, DVP642.html

which is like a gold mine to me, saving me a lot of tedium in tracing all connections by hand. Another lucky thing is the excellent M8 Transistor Tester (http://elecfreaks.com/estore/download/EF06128-LCR-1602tester.pdf) I've built from a kit about one year ago, since it lets me test caps in the circuit. Thus I find a few more aged caps, as expected, in power supply as well as dried out filtering caps in the motherboard. I replace all, but the bloodydamn thing still doesn't work. OK, I move to diodes - I use my multimeter to test each one in circuit. Bingo! I find one of the rectifier diodes, D301, to be shorted. I have quite a few 1N4007's in my collection of parts, so replacement is a breeze. I put the power supply board back in, turn it on - it works! The front display comes up, DVD drawer opens - cool! I load a test video and watch it for a few minutes.

It's Friday night, so the good news for my coworker will have to wait till Monday. With a warm, good feeling I focus on my other electronics projects. My first repair - I fixed it!

Or so I thought…

To be continued
 

Thread Starter

aromring

Joined Jul 22, 2015
28
Day 3
First thing on Monday morning, with a big smile I announce to my coworker: "It's fixed". I connect it to a flat panel TV in the conference room expecting to see the same test video I saw on Friday… and nothing works! Connections? No, these are fine. Besides, the DVD drawer doesn't open and power light is off. :( What the <bleep>?! Talking about the ultimate manifestation of the Murphy's Law. "Well", she says, "looks like this player is heading to its final destination: garbage can." I'm quite embarrassed, but answer this: "Oh no, I don't give up so easily. Now I HAVE TO repair it, regardless of cost. It's in my nature to push back twice as strong when pushed!"

Back at home, I start systematic testing of the power supply board, element by element. Almost instantly, my attention focuses on the same +12V power line, as well as -24V which originates from the same secondary coil. My multimeter shows only +8.4V and -20.4V, respectively. Why so low? It can't be the transformer, because it feeds the other two lines, +5V and -12V, that are perfectly OK.

Days 4-7
I am so fixated on the underpowered +12V/-24V line, that I spend every available minute examining it in detail. I desolder and test every single diode attached to it. They all are fine. Same with resistors. Examine all lines leading from mains to on/off switch, back to SMPS, in and out. All OK. The only logical explanation seems to point back at the transformer. But again, the +5V supplied by the same transformer is fine, supplying even slightly higher voltage of +5.23V! It's a mystery. V1/V2 = N1/N2, right? Ratio of transformed voltages equals the ratio of coil windings, right? And the latter have not changed, right?

Often I get good ideas under the shower, or while falling asleep. This time it occurs to me while I shampoo my hair that perhaps the N2 HAS changed: the +12V/-24V might have shorted internally in such a way that it's number of windings is now effectively lower. This is still very bizarre and improbable. The player did work on Friday, after all. Hence, why would such shorting occur on Monday morning - right then and there? Still, I don't have any other explanation. That's bad news because transformers are custom-made for SMPS manufacturers, so I can't just pop the old one out and replace it with another. Unless, I find another board like this. Hmm… Thus, I search the Internet stores and, incredibly, I find one on-line store in Canada that has refurbished SMPS board with the same model number! Let me find it… here: https://alfa-electronique.com. It's the last one in stock, so I order it promptly.

Bah! Two weeks minimum shipping time. Damn.

To be continued
 

JoeJester

Joined Apr 26, 2005
4,390
Back at home, I start systematic testing of the power supply board, element by element. Almost instantly, my attention focuses on the same +12V power line, as well as -24V which originates from the same secondary coil. My multimeter shows only +8.4V and -20.4V, respectively. Why so low? It can't be the transformer, because it feeds the other two lines, +5V and -12V, that are perfectly OK.
So, have you replaced the power supply load with resistive loads to test it?
 

SLK001

Joined Nov 29, 2011
1,549
Ten days of anguish is already up to two weeks. I'm already too bored to continue living.

Forget the transformer. Check Q303, C309, then U301.
 

#12

Joined Nov 30, 2010
18,224
Personal information about your showering habits and emotional condition can be posted in your blog space on this site. That would make this easier for me to read. (Other people have different opinions.)

Personally, I tend to get wordy, but only in Off Topic where people aren't searching for technical facts between descriptions of how I feel.;)
 

Thread Starter

aromring

Joined Jul 22, 2015
28
Days 8-9
Well, I am not going to just sit and wait for two weeks. The curiosity takes over. Since the "patient" is already on the "operating table" I explore other circuits. I check the remote's IR signal and the associated circuit response - it works. Now, I recall that the digital display does not work at all. Well, well, this is where the -24V line connects. The LED display is managed by the HT16512 controller, so I probe it here and there, and it all seems in working order: it's powered by the healthy +5V. I wonder how it communicates with the motherboard? Through RB502. Curious, I connect my oscilloscope to the communication lines and … see nothing. What? Turn on and off - nothing. Both the LED board and motherboard do receive healthy +5V, on entry, so what's going on? All right, I am checking VCC on HT16512 - OK, checking VDD on ES6698 - the main microprocessor - not OK. Wow, wow, go back: "not OK"? Yes, all of CPUs power pins read 0V. How? Check motherboard entry point: still +5V!

Aha! There must be a problem in between motherboard's RB302 connector and the CPU. [Somehow, that reminds me of the PEBKAC acronym (look it up :) ] With renewed vigor I start checking all the joints and during these searches I accidentally touch something and in the corner of my vision I see the DVD laser diode coming alive for a brief moment. Wait, wait, what was that? What did I touch? Ah, it's one of the filtering capacitors near RB302 - I replaced all of them on day 2. All replacements were new and thoroughly tested by me for capacity and ESR. How could one be bad? The player worked on Friday, after these replacements, right? No, it's not bad, further testing reveals that I have to tilt it certain way to either open or close the power connection to the motherboard internals. Interesting…

I unscrew the motherboard again and look underneath. Everything looks OK. So I dig out my USB microscope and carefully check all connections to the guilty cap. I see it: one of the copper tracks is slightly detached from the surface. Impossible to notice without a microscope. The cap is still connected, but tilting detaches/reattaches its track from the rest of the circuit. Wow.
160507110901946598.jpg
So this was the source of this bloodydamn problem all along. I created this monster. While fixing the original problem - bad cap and diode in SMPS - I followed the advice of checking/replacing all other caps on power lines. Inadvertently, while soldering this particular new cap, I must've pushed it too hard detaching its circuit track. On Friday, it was tilted the right way and all connections were fine. While I was driving on Monday morning (and I'm a rough driver) it titled the other way breaking the +5V line.

Holy cow.

I've soldered an extra wire on top the broken track, to ensure connection. That was it, a very short piece of wire to finally fix everything.
1605071309238168056.jpg
It also solves the mystery of low voltage on the +12V/-24V line. It is the +5V line that is monitored by the SMPS circuitry via the H11A817 optocoupler. Therefore, if +5V is consumed the transformer must work harder to meet the demand. Conversely, open +5V makes transformer's work easy. Consequently, the power invested into the other line, the +12V/-24V, follows the same trend.

Day 10
I bring the repaired DVD player to the office, quietly, connect it to the TV in conference room. It works, phew! Only then I call my coworker - she's all happy.

Photo May 09.jpegPhoto May 09_2.jpeg
 

Thread Starter

aromring

Joined Jul 22, 2015
28
Epilogue
She's happy until this day, since the player works perfectly OK since my repair back in May.

Now, on day 1 I promised to write about the obsolescence by design. Yes, it concerns one cap, C309, in the primary circuitry of the SMPS: the manufacturer placed it precisely in between transistors and power resistor, making sure they all touch. Both transistors and the resistor get very hot during normal operation, thus this cap also gets hot and cozy. As you all know, electrolytic caps are sensitive to high temperature failing faster when hot… So there you have it: obsolescence by design. Dirty low blow. :(

IMG_8563.JPG
IMG_8565.JPG
 

TQFP44

Joined Sep 3, 2016
51
I liked your tail, ending was a not dramatic enough for me, I was expecting more cliff hangers. or more about the "cute" co-worker, ;)
 

atferrari

Joined Jan 6, 2004
4,764
I liked your tail, ending was a not dramatic enough for me, I was expecting more cliff hangers. or more about the "cute" co-worker, ;)
Wish it was in much few words. I understand the thrill but I prefer just technical data and comments. Otherwise, I got some inspiring books in my bookcase.
 
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