I have a Dell 1909WF LCD screen I am trying to fix.
Sorry, I'm telling a long story, just to show my diagnostic methods, what I've tried, what I saw, in case that helps for suggestions..
I got it because it didn't turn on, replaced the caps, as this always seems to be the cause/issue, however it still didn't work. I eventually found that one half of the AP9971GD MOSFET chip (just a pair of N channel enhancement mode fets in an 8 pin dip) was failed/shorted, so it was putting too much load on the transformer/SMPS etc, so it was cycling trying to start and restarting etc. I don't have a scope, I'm just using a voltmeter.
Removing the pins of that chip from the board allowed the screen to start up, so I just hacked off the half of the chip that was bung and stuck some random 60V 5A (or higher) rated MOSFET in it's place, and everything worked fine.
A few months later, it started developing issues with flickering, and then the backlights would turn off, requiring power cycling the monitor to get them back on. My presumption was that it must have been the other half of the chip/MOSFET which I didn't replace, had now failed, (although I am now pretty sure dud caps causes that) so I went about removing the other MOSFET, but then it was back to doing the restart cycle thing, even with both MOSFETS removed.
Reading the service manual (later), I find that this may have been caused because it has voltage sensing on the high voltage output of the backlight inverter circuit, which is uses to detect when it needs to be in "striking" mode, or normal operating mode (presumably needs a higher voltage to light the CCFLs up initially) and it shuts down/restarts if it detects the HV didn't come up at all, which it wouldn't when the FETs were missing..
As I mentioned, I now suspect the flickering and shutting off was caused by failed caps, even though I had already replaced them when I was first trying to fix the monitor, so I didn't suspect those, and rather than replacing them again, I started poking around on the high voltage DC side, trying to find if something had failed there, and in the process accidentally shorted the source or drain to the gate on the main MOSFET which drives the transformer for the low voltage DC, rendering it cactus. D'oh.
I tried a couple of random similar FETs I had in my junk as replacements for that FET, but couldn't find one that would work (and tried an IGBT, but that just blew the main AC fuse, oops), so I ordered an exact replacement for the HV MOSFET. It finally arrives from China and I just put that in, but I'm still seeing the cycling instead of starting up.
On the low voltage DC side, I disconnected everything from the transformer windings, (it has 3 outputs, 5V, 12.5V, and 16V) but couldn't measure any voltage from any of the windings. I have since realised I need to test with a diode in between the positive lead, the positive side of the winding, and the negative side of the windings to be able to measure any potential difference, anyway..
Reconnecting the 5V circuitry and powering up the power supply board results in a nice stable 5V, since this part has the opto isolator for the feedback to the gate driver on the HV DC side. When I reconnect the 12.5V audio output, and the 16V backlight inverter parts of the circuit, it starts the cycling again, and I notice that the 5V drops to an unstable 3.3V. The 16V is some unstable 12/13V.
Now I can actually even hear the MOSFET on the HV DC cycling. Ok, so there's something still wrong with the backlight inverter we'd think..
I found the service manual, which is surprisingly useful, explaining all the sections of the power supply, and the startup process etc. In here I find that it describes that the 5V supply is used on the gate driver, along with the 16V output from the transformer via the MOSFETs to power the backlight transformer.
Just for fun, I got 2 variable voltage bench/test power supplies, set one to 5V, and the other to 16V, and after connecting these to the ground of the transformer windings and the 5V circuit and the 16V circuit, after the diodes so the supplies can't backfeed the transformer, I find that the screen does a similar restarting loop, where I see pretty much no current draw on the 5V, about 200mA on the 16V, which then drops down to about 20mA, increases up to 200mA, and cycles. This I understand to be the screen detecting that the HV for the backlights didn't come up, but putting the voltmeter across the output side of the HV transformer for the backlights shows me I don't know how HV since the meter on the 1000V scale doesn't seem to go high enough, and I'm presuming this is because there's no load because the CCFLs aren't plugged in.
They weren't connected because it's awkward trying to connect them while the display board is still mounted in the back chassis and the power supply is upside down etc, so I take the display board out, and set everything up so I can connect the backlights. Applying power again, the screen lights up, and the current draw on the 16V is consistent. Interesting. I connected the display board to the panel, repower it. blue power LED comes on, screen lights up, shows me "no input detected" and the nice little RGB test square moving around the screen.. OK, so it's working. Was perhaps the cycling issue because I didn't have the CCFLs connected when I was trying to power via the main power supply?
I unhook my 5V and 16V test power supplies, and plug in the AC. We're back to unstable 3.3V and 12/13V. WTF.
Since the low voltage DC side works properly when the correct voltages are there, I'm sure the issue has to be in the HV DC area. What should I be looking at here?
I have just noticed that the service manually is saying that the gate driver IC on the HV DC side is controlled by the 16V output of the aux winding of the transformer (used for the HV side, not the LV, that's a different 16V output), and this 16V output is used to charge a 10uF cap and power the VCC pin of the gate driver. Is it possible that if this cap is defective, the VCC could be unstable, and the chip would then drive the MOSFET out of whack?
I have included the HV DC circuit diagram in case it helps.
Thanks!
Edit: A thought, is it possible that the replacement FETs being a lot higher rated could be an issue? I replaced the blown chip with a pair of IRF1404B FETs, since I found I had a handful of them, although now I am confused because I can't find the same datasheet, which I thought I looked at that showed they had a 200V rating, I am only finding 40V rates on 1404s now..
Service manual is here:
https://www.manualslib.com/manual/737481/Dell-1909wf.htmlDatasheet for blown fet chip (which I don't think is the issue) is here:
https://pdf1.alldatasheet.com/datasheet-pdf/view/248903/A-POWER/AP9971GD.html