Thank you all for the responses!!
This may not be relevant, but it is a curiosity question:
Is this 1.591Vdc always around the same value - or does it change? If it does change, what is the timing?
If you have disconnected all off-board connections and the voltage is still low, then the likelihood there is a problem on the power board is going to be high. Can you get a good close-up photos of this board - top and bottom would be good. (Remember - good framing, good lighting and good focus make such photos more useful.)
1.591Vdc is constant, doesn't change.
I have attached a couple of photos of both front and back of the power board.
Please let me know if you need more up close pictures of a particular area/ component.
Check all power rails for ground shorts. Might be a cracked filter cap. Check for heat sources, freeze spray can be helpful.
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I really appreciate the advice but I'm still a newbie and need to mention that I only have basic knowledge about electronics and I'm learning things everyday from people like you, so please bear with me
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I'm not entirely sure how to check for ground shorts. I'm assuming that I need to disconnect the power, set multi-meter to resistance then attach one lead to ground and the other to each of the output pins that I mentioned earlier and look for very low resistance, something like 0.1 to 0.3 ohms??
I had a similar problem with a DELL mointor before, there, some of the CCFL tube connectors were "burnt". As there were some sort of preformed conductive rubber thingies those were holding the CCFL tubes in place and making the electrical contact too to the inverter. Some of them got corroded and failed to make proper contact and it was shutting down eventually. This monitor used an LG panel I think.
I managed to repair this with soldering all the CCFL tubes with a thin wire to the inverter contact, while I left the rubber stuff there for the mechanical support.
That will be my next step if the power board doesn't do the trick.
Hi
Good work so far.
-looked for obvious burn marks, swollen caps: seem to look OK
Capacitors can fail without outward signs.
My bet is on capacitors on the 5V rail gone bad.
Try soldering new cap across this rail and see if the monitor starts working.
Thanks for the encouragement!
I think I found the cap that's related to the 5V rail (please see picture attached). It looks like its a 10V 1000uF , the positive lead of the cap is connected to the 3 pins of the 5V output.
I removed it from the circuit and its reading 887uF.