If this is off topic please move it to the right board. So I had an off brand LCD monitor whose manufacturing date is unknown to me, lets say its 5 years old. It would turn on for several seconds and then shut off. I read up a little and found a trick to reduce the brightness. Working with a menu for two seconds at a time is tricky, but I eventually notched the brightness down to zero and guess what - it stayed on! It was just really dim. What I read may be a cause of the is a bad / dying capacitor. So I popped it open and scrutinized every capacitor to look for bulges, brown areas and / or leaking electrolyte and nothing.
My question is: are there any other replaceable components that may cause the issue I described? Is there another way to find a defective capacitor without unsoldering and dsicharging / testing every one on the board? Signs are pointing to me throwing it in a dumpster
My question is: are there any other replaceable components that may cause the issue I described? Is there another way to find a defective capacitor without unsoldering and dsicharging / testing every one on the board? Signs are pointing to me throwing it in a dumpster
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Profession x64Intel Core i516 GB DDR3Intel HD Graphics
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Build
- OS
- Windows 7 Profession x64
- CPU
- Intel Core i5
- Motherboard
- Intel DB75EN
- Memory
- 16 GB DDR3
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel HD Graphics
- Sound Card
- Realtek High Definition Audio
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Dual Viewsonic TD2220 touchscreen displays
- Hard Drives
- Seagate 500GB 7200 RPM
- Case
- Slimline
- Cooling
- Standard Intel heat sink / fan.
- Keyboard
- Microsoft boring keyboard - it works!