Author Topic: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor  (Read 7749 times)

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Offline joa.bulderbyTopic starter

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High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« on: February 16, 2015, 10:04:18 pm »
Hello all.

Does anyone know what the typical voltage output is from the transformer inside an lcd monitor? By the wires coming out it looks like it is powering the backlight. I have measured the input voltage on the board to 10 volts dc, but my multimeter cannot measure the output voltage, the multimeter has an upper limit of 500 volts dc.

The writing on the side of the transformer says: EFD20-0101 1430

I have attached 2 photos of the board

Thanks in advance

/Joachim
 

Offline mikeselectricstuff

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #1 on: February 16, 2015, 10:07:34 pm »
Normal running voltage is a few hundred volts, but at startup, before the tube strikes,  it outputs a couple of kV using resonance of the secondary  with the output cap to strike the tube.
Not a good idea to connect a DMM to.
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Offline TheEPROM9

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #2 on: February 16, 2015, 10:14:44 pm »
Normal running voltage is a few hundred volts, but at startup, before the tube strikes,  it outputs a couple of kV using resonance of the secondary  with the output cap to strike the tube.
Not a good idea to connect a DMM to.

I have hooked up meters to these, meters complained but still work. Still not worth risking you meter.

One wonders about using these to make the magic smoke come out of components =-)
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Offline joa.bulderbyTopic starter

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #3 on: February 16, 2015, 10:21:07 pm »
My multimeter did make a strange noise when trying to measure it, which makes sense if the output is 4 times the limit  |O  I might have ruined it, I'll have to take it apart to see the damage.

Thanks for the super quick responses  :)

BTW Mike, I am a big fan of your youtube channel, keep posting your videos.

/Joachim
 

Offline mikeselectricstuff

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #4 on: February 16, 2015, 10:41:10 pm »
Th few kv will get clamped by the MOV in any decent meter, possibly glitching the MCU, but there is a risk that it will start a tracking process, that will make the PCB conductive enough for the main supply to burn.
These things can pull a good few mm of arc, though laptop ones tend to have more protection against overload  so are often less fun than the older, simpler  ones.

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Offline TheEPROM9

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #5 on: February 16, 2015, 10:57:13 pm »
I have at least one inverter laying round from an old scanner, I should have a play when I get time, it did not have the energy to make a Jacobs ladder :(
TheEPROM9 (The Husky Hunter Collectors inc.)
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Offline miguelvp

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #6 on: February 17, 2015, 09:47:01 am »
I just saw this video, any other ideas for testing?

The inverter should be running about 35KHz, what he was picking up on his hands and near the laptop was the mains 60Hz and the case or metal frame around the screen and his body were acting as antennas (humans don't oscillate at 60Hz neither)

If you bring your probe near a metallic desk it will pick up the mains frequency as well. So that's not a good probing solution.
 

Offline mikeselectricstuff

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #7 on: February 17, 2015, 09:48:01 am »
DMMs and HV probes will have frequency limits - these will be listed in the manual.
The HV starting voltage will have quite a high source impedance, and stray capacitance in the probe & DMM will attenuate it significantly - PSU output caps are typically low tens of pF.
The best way to test these is with a tube ( of roughly comparable size).
Failiing that, a Dmm before the output cap will be more reliable.
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Offline tautech

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Re: High voltage transformer from lcd monitor
« Reply #8 on: February 17, 2015, 09:58:50 am »
For a Tek TDS210 I repaired years ago there was specific instruction in the Service manual for backlight repairs.
It stated:  use a 100:1 probe and expect a 1250V p-p output @ ~60 KHz.
If the voltage was present but still no display, replace the display.


I now use this MO for backlight investigations:
The switching frequency & primary voltage can be safely confirmed before the step-up transformer and HV presence can comfirmed using any scope probe as a "near feild" probe.
No contact needed, just a close presence of the probe will pick up the EMI.

Sure there are controllers that shut down the backlight if something is amiss, but thats another issue.

BTW the Tek as described above had NO controller, just a simple bipolar push pull inverter with a knackered timing cap.  :-DD
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