The panel is, sadly, dead (for any reasonable TV-viewing purpose) as the pixel-wide pink lines are caused by failure of the address drivers.
I was first wondering which pink lines you were talking about when I read your post, so I had to go back to Dave's video to have a look. And sure enough, I could clearly see the lines now when looking at the video in 1080p on a larger display. I watched the video on a smartphone the first time, that's probably why I missed it.
I think you might be right. Those vertical lines certainly doesn't look good, and one common cause would be a problem with the either the flat flex cable(s) which are bonded to the X electrodes in the plasma panel (they could be ruptured), or the COF on these flat flex cables (could be faulty), or poor bonding of the flat flex to the plasma panel which makes them lose contact with age. There isn't much to do in any of these cases as repairing a flat flex cable or a COF is nearly impossible.
However, a lot of people have reported fixing X address problems by simply locating which flat flex cable that corresponds to the affected area, then releasing the flat flex cable from the connector at the X address board, cleaning the flat flex cable end with a bit of alcohol as well as the connector, and then reseating the flat flex into the connector again. I would certainly have tried that if I were Dave since I definitely think it's worth a shot.
It looks like the vertical lines are happening only on either the upper half or the lower half of the picture. Some of the lines, for example, are present only at the upper left portion of the screen. This suggests to me that this is a dual scan plasma TV and not a single scan one.
Hold on...
Ok, I just checked the video again. Yes, it's a dual scan system, because you can clearly see the X address boards at the top of the TV as well, not only at the bottom. (Around 3 mins into the video.)
The lines going vertically through the screen would then have something to do with the X address bus corresponding to that portion of the screen.
For example, the lines at the upper left of the screen, those lines would correspond to the upper right flat flex cables going into the plasma panel, looking at the TV from the back as can be seen at around 3 minutes in.
There is a metal bar going at the top of the TV from left to right. This bar is partly covering the two X address boards. If this bar is removed, the flat flex cables for the X address electrodes can then be accessed. It's then possible to clean them and reseat them in an attempt to repair the TV. Definitely worth a try, I would say.
Of course, the same goes for any vertical lines at the bottom half of the screen. The cause would then likely be the corresponding flat flex cables at the bottom of the screen instead.
And the flickering is most likely because of the bad capacitors. It might be a bit unnecessary to replace the capacitors if the flat flex issue cannot be fixed anyway, so I would have a look at the flat flex cables at first and try to clean them to see if that fixes the vertical lines to start with. If it does, I would then go for the capacitors in an attempt to get rid of the flickering.
These are bonded to the display panel and are non-serviceable.
Actually, you can service them, but you would need to have access to a special bonding machine used for that very purpose, and this is not something you would often find in the ordinary workshop. So indeed, they are non-serviceable for most people.
Part of the problem is the drivers dissipate a lot of heat in a tiny area (1" x 0.2" max, 5W or so) and most manufacturers don't heatsink them well.
In the case of a COF sitting on the flat flex for the X address electrodes, it seems to be common to heatsink these chips by using the metal bar covering the X address boards as a big heat sink. These COF are then pressed against this metal bar with thermal paste in between, heatsinking the COF driver ICs.
I don't know the reason why many plasma TVs are designed like this. Wouldn't it be better to have the driver ICs mounted directly on the X address boards (with heat sinks, of course), and just have a plain flat flex cable going to the X electrodes in the plasma display panel? It would certainly be a lot easier to service these TV sets if that was the case, but there might be some design complications involved there which I don't fully understand, perhaps...
Perhaps it will be good enough for someone who just wants to use it as a TV but I certainly would struggle to use it...
Same here. I didn't notice the lines first time watching the video (sorry about that), which made me believe that the lines that Dave was talking about was the type of line fault that only shows up every once in a while. I could live with that if it's not too serious, but I wouldn't want to use a TV that has stationary lines or some other kind of continuous line failure, which is the case with the set in Dave's video.
But on the other hand, I would certainly not mind taking on the challenge of repairing it.
LOVE your YT channel
Haha. Love you too man.