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ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012
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This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and 1st March February 2012

 

Latest post 09-27-2007 4:54 PM by ipaul. 14 replies.
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  • 09-24-2007 10:51 PM

    New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Morning all...

           it's ten to four on a Tuesday morning, and I'm at work. This is not right. Ah well....

           I may need to look in to the possibility of changing the tube on the Avant; does anyone know where to get one from, or a good place to take it to? Simon of AVA services in Coulsdon (beneath the B&O shop there) has been recommended to me...

           Thanks -

                   Alex.

    ________________________________________ Beowulf - the Original music aficionado...?
  • 09-25-2007 2:45 AM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Hi Alex,

    I would think the staff in the B & O shop above Simon will have heard whether he  'cuts the mustard'.  Ask them & then ask Simon for a quote if their answer is favourable.  I have a feeling the answer will be 'Yes!'  Good luck!

     

    John

     

  • 09-25-2007 3:28 AM In reply to

    • 9 LEE
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    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Simon is first class, and a very respected engineer in B&O circles.

    Lee
    Smile

    BeoWorld - Everything Bang & Olufsen

  • 09-25-2007 7:43 AM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Tube cost is circa £350 from B and O ... budget for about 3 hours of work.

    Neil

  • 09-25-2007 9:32 AM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    ....That is, if it's a 100 Hz (type 83XX), a 50 Hz (T81XX) becomes even more expensive because they put a different type of tube in which requires an adapted deflection board.

    Now to my knowledge Philips lowered the price of new tubes to about 200 euro but B&O increased the prices....but so far i didn't find an alternative source to buy the Avant tubes, maybe someone knows ??

  • 09-25-2007 2:39 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Perhaps I should look further into the problem... the picture is fine except for the green channel, which appears to be completely out of control - when no image is being displayed the screen has a dark green tinge all over with faint lines through it. Is this repairable? My knowledge of TV control mechanisms isn't fantastic, but I presume that that means one of the electron gun focusing/scanning plates has died. I have a horrible feeling that that isn't going to be the kind of thing that can be changed separately...

    Any thoughts, guys?

     

    Alex 

    ________________________________________ Beowulf - the Original music aficionado...?
  • 09-25-2007 5:07 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Alex, i'm afraid you're very right: tube going down...and unfortunately officially unrepairable.
    I say officially because i while ago i saw ads of companies fixing them with tapping on it while using a tube regenerator but recently i haven't heard anymore of this and i think if it works at all it's probably a temp solution.

    Now depending on the type of Avant and age and what's it worth to you should lead to the desicion to fix it or not....i'm afraid it doesn't get better than this :(.
  • 09-25-2007 11:48 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Not so fast.......   with a little patience and a Sencore CR-7000 CRT analyzer this can likely be fixed.  Now, it could be a heater to cathode short as well, which CANNOT be burned away with the sencore.  BUT....  I have had great success by overheating the cathode by momentarily increasing the filament voltage to 150-175% of normal.  Let cook for 30 seconds to a minute and cool.  Test the tube.  Repeat if needed.  It's a last ditch effort IF a replacement CRT is not available or prohibitively expensive.

    Anyhow... I repair broadcast video monitors for a living, and sony trinitron tubes are the most difficult tubes to reclaim.  I have had great success overall.  Most other types respond a lot better.  The Beovision uses a non trinitron tube, so prospects are better.

    So you'd need someone with a CR-7000 to look at it.  The tube is un-usable as-is, nothing to loose by trying.

    Good luck!

     

    Marc
     

  • 09-26-2007 8:58 AM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Marc, if the only 'trick' here is overheating wouldn't just putting AC of about 9v on the filament be sufficient ?
    Where does the analyzer come in and does it have to be this model ?
    I'm asking out of interest, i fix tv sets for a long time and nowadays Avants with tube problems are common and the same problem for everyone: useless the way it is and replacing the tube is too expensive.
    I have a 8111 here too with a 'sick' tube but i don't have a (rather expensive and these days rather useless) tube analyser, so that's why i'm interested....:).
  • 09-26-2007 11:56 AM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Actually, you want to use a variable DC powersupply to heat the tube.  I am not sure myself why this often works, but my theory is that the much higher temperatures causes the cathode and filament to over-expand.  When it cools back down, often the filament has been pushed just enough away from the cathode to "not short".

    The sencore is used to find out WHAT the problem is to begin with, as well as life-test the tube.  Often a low level cleaning run on the cathodes will also bring back the full brightness of the tube.  I have both a CR-70 as well as a CR-7000.  The main difference is that the CR-7000 can test all 3 guns at the same time and it's GENTLER on the cathodes.  I used to strip trinitron cathodes with the CR-70.  I had to buy a 7000 after sencore assured me that this won't occur with this model.  And it hasn't.  Although I can still wipe out the tube on the higher settings.

    I repair and calibrate broadcast studio monitors, so still have a need for the Sencore.  Flat panels still cannot be used for color critical editing, so I have a great niche market.  Especially in Los Angeles.  

    Anyhow, the point is that tubes are getting VERY scarce.  If you can save the tube, it's fantastic.  If all fails, the tube was bad anyway.  But to do nothing......   Personally I'd rather try it first.

    So, on a 6.3 volt heater I'd go up slowly to as much as 11 volts and let it bake for 60 seconds.  Then test.  Rinse and repeat as needed.  Tube is shot anyway, even if you blow out the filament.  Nothing to loose.  

    Maybe a 3rd option, and this doesn't work on all sets.... a filament/cathode isolator.  TV shops used to use them for this.  It's a transformer that is wired into the filament leads to isolate the filament VOLTAGE from the cathode.  The potential remains, but it can't bias the cathode on, so you loose the green (or red or blue) background.

    Well, glad to help, so ask away anytime.

    Marc 

  • 09-26-2007 9:28 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Many thanks, Marc! Now, where did I put my Sencore 7000? Wink

    I'll pass this on to Simon, see if he thinks it's possible and whether he has the tools - if this works this could be a very useful procedure, as you say, there are many sick and dying Avant's out there and it would be nice to be able to expand their lifespans. It's either this, or find out whether there is any other tube (eg Philips) that can be used to replace it.

    ________________________________________ Beowulf - the Original music aficionado...?
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  • 09-26-2007 10:07 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Don't forget.... this takes a certain "feel" to do, as well as knowing what the particular tube type can take.

    As to replacements, similar tubes can be swapped.  I do this a lot.  They have to be in the same family, but it's also possible to

    make a custom socket adaptor if the pins are different.  The basic voltages need to be close to avoid modifications to the set itself.

    A good "old school" tv guy should be able to do all this.  Pity that modern techs are mostly board swappers.  

     

  • 09-27-2007 12:02 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Thanks Marc for the clear explanation.
    What it also needs to find an affordable replacement tube is specs of the original and replacement and the thing is: (well, at least with the TVs overhere) up 'till the Philips widescreen tube with it's troubles we never ever experience broken tubes, the 4:3 ones, i fixed all kinds of tv's over the last 30 years or so and if i ever had 3 broken tubes....that's about it.
    So nobody 'digs' into this matter....
    And than there's the physical fitting: the S-flat replacement for the T8111 is supplied with some bushing to make it fit.
    If you add up all this experimenting, modifying and chasing data etc especially for the T8111 it again isn't worth it imho.
    However, the experiment with 'burning' the shortcut out so to speak (or fit a 'transformer') is a good one: nothing gained, nothing lost...:).
    But to find this nice tube analyser you mentioned overhere....ust any picture tube analyser is already not so common (probably for the reason i mentioned earlier: no need for it).
    Is it adviseable to put the tube forward (screen facing floor) when doing this ??
    I also heard of people heating it and tapping it...
  • 09-27-2007 12:56 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Yes, you can heat and tap it as well.  But not too hard.....

    Some people face the tube down, the theory being that any contaminant will fall harmlessly into the bell.  However, between the cathode and the front of the tube is still the entire electron gun structure, so this probably doesn't actually work.  I never do this.  I shoot tubes with the back off the set sitting normally on my bench.  Worked fine for 20 years.  The only difference is that I have modified my procedures over the years to reclaim heater to cathode shorts which "cannot" be removed by zapping it.  (A high current discharge between the cathode and filament WILL burn away the short, but blow open the filament at the same time.)  Anyhow, you have nothing to loose.  In cases where a CRT is still "OK" but a bit soft, I refuse to shoot it.  Since it's still entirely watchable, the risk is too high.  But if it's really hosed..... sky's the limit.

    Marc 

  • 09-27-2007 4:54 PM In reply to

    Re: New tube for Beovision Avant 28"

    Yeah, i think i can give it a try with a normal power supply to try the 'heather' trick on the broken T8111 and see....
    Don't exactly know when i have time (and a power supply) for this but will surely post my findings :), it's very interesting though reading your experience and the way you deal with it, especially overhere the Avant get's 'undervalued' because of this whereas even a good old 50Hz type is still a great tv to use nowadays so an affordable fix is really wellcome :).
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