Hi Sup Forums. I have 15V power supply but this TV needs 13.2V (bought it used and it didn't come with cable). Would the TV have a voltage regulator? Is it safe to use it since it's only slightly higher?
Hi Sup Forums. I have 15V power supply but this TV needs 13.2V (bought it used and it didn't come with cable)...
Do you have the equipment to verify exactly how much voltage the power supply is outputting?
Probably.
No. Are you saying the information printed on the power supply isn't always right?
There are tolerance levels.
ive done this a few times.
it always ended in my device's electronic board frying.
My laptop says she wants 19V. I've fed her 16 to 21 Volts, she is okay with it.
Hmm. Well I can't measure the voltage. Should I just play it safe and not use it?
Well I think I'll try a lower voltage supply first. Seems a little safer.
So does anyone know how these old Emerson TVs handle higher voltages? Or somewhere I can find out?
If it's something designed to plug into a vehicle it should be able to handle anything from 12 to 15, because alternators.
Well it may actually be. Its quite small. I think I'm gonna try the 15v now
Oh shit. I used the 15v and when I plugged it in a saw a spark in the TV. Did I just dun goofed
Yes. I wish I was in here 10 minutes ago. Putting a 15V supply on a circuit designed for 13.2 is at best going to thermally stress the regulation circuitry and eventually cause failure. At worst, well you got that one. If you smelled magic smoke then you blew a cap or reg. You're fucked OP.
Well what about the guy that uses the higher voltages on his laptop?
It might still work, had some trash-picked computer speakers where a filtering cap blew up the first time, but after removing it worked fine.
The voltage rating is a meme and depends entirely on the circuit design, cost/space cutting measures, etc.
You can't always get away with it.
So you cant trust the rating? You can only trust what a meter tells you?
So I would have to remove any caps that blew but wouldn't necessarily have to replace them? Could there be multiple blown caps?
It's not a good idea. The EEs who designed the board might have built in some tolerance, or maybe they didn't. Having a wider input range means more money in the BOM. If you don't understand the design and the tolerances on the parts, then just stick with the nameplate rating.
You just pulled the filter cap? I'm surprised they still worked, and if there was no noticeable liine hum in the speakers I'm even more surprised.
Power supplies are generally within 10%. Sometimes the open circuit voltage is as much as 50% higher than when loaded to rating though. Depends on the design. When in doubt, test it.
In a set of speakers you might get away with that shit because it's probably all passives and an analog amp. In a TV you really need the smoothing because it's going to have delicate digital logic. Good luck trying though.
Wait digital logic? This is an old TV. What digital logic is there?
I'm a noob when it comes to electronics that aren't computers btw
dont worry you are in the right place
hopefully im not here too late but dont go fucking around in a crt tv that you just powered on
its going to be charged for hours now maybe even weeks
you would need to discharge the CRT with gloves and a ground or a conductive screwdriver (without killing yourself)
seriously dont start poking around in there unless you use precautions
youre dealing with heavy amperage
christ
this is why you guys cant give out advice on shit you arent familliar with
you guys fucking blew up a guys tv and now probably ruptured his heart
great job Sup Forums
the day Sup Forums tried to be /diy/
>man dies
stick with software
Hahahaha. No I'm not dead. But I wish I had went diy now I guess :( rip TV
I am late to the party but why is there a AC input right next to the DC input? Shouldn't it have worked with AC anyway?
>I have a 15 V power supply, but the TV is 13.2V
>There's a fucking AC 120 Volt Input right there
Why are you making things difficult for yourself?
I didn't have that cable either and didn't expect to find one.