Testing TV Backlight LEDs

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  • čas přidán 23. 01. 2015
  • Video demonstrating how you can test your backlight LEDs without expensive test equipment.
    Summarized versions of most projects: www.swappart.com
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 104

  • @SaccoBelmonte
    @SaccoBelmonte Před 8 lety +5

    Thank you that was pretty effective! I could pinpoint the exact faulty LED with this.
    I used two rechangeable batteries for a total of 2.66V and two needles , which totally worked.

  • @TronSAHeroXYZ
    @TronSAHeroXYZ Před 8 lety +2

    You helped me fix my tv TY so much man. You're really appreciated.

  • @wecansavenergy
    @wecansavenergy Před 6 měsíci

    Thank you very much for your explanation of testing these LED strips. Very helpful!

  • @mickeygovender
    @mickeygovender Před 8 lety

    Thank You.Your video has really helped me.

  • @simonpreece6916
    @simonpreece6916 Před 5 lety +2

    Cheers worked great for me - found the LEDs which have gone. My bars are Vestel revo.2 (i think) with 9 LEDs a piece, working from the end which plugs in i tested by placing the positive probe into the large area before each LED and the negative on the large area before the next LED (note the area immediately after the LED being tested just shorts the battery so skip it) to test the led at the tip I found it easist to put the positive probe in tbe same as before but put the negative on the main negative solder tab for the whole strip.
    I hope the above makes sense - it took me a while to work out where to stab them and i was about to give up! Good luck all
    Now i just need to figure out how to replace these bad boys

  • @jesussaves6671
    @jesussaves6671 Před 8 lety

    this is cool. can we do it without removing them from the panel

  • @nelsonwalker4370
    @nelsonwalker4370 Před 8 lety

    have a e47oi-a0 did the voltage test had 129 volts on both vout 1&2. video says it's the LEDs. I'm getting ready to test the LEDs. what I don't understand is why they all are out. is this a possible problem with it interface board, or are they wired like Christmas lights if one goes out they all go out.

  • @linzmcgeorge
    @linzmcgeorge Před 4 lety +1

    Wealth of knowledge! Thank you! May I suggest a set of flat diamond files to sharpen your probe needles? They almost last forever and have a ton of uses.

  • @petertaylor3424
    @petertaylor3424 Před 7 lety

    awesome mate . works a treat 👍

  • @leecewest
    @leecewest Před 7 lety +1

    I picked up a 50" LG with a bad back-light. I used a 2032 with a 3D printed holder with this needle method and found 4 defective LEDs. I bought 12 LEDs for $10 and replaced the 4 bad LEDs and the TV is working! Thank you very much for this video!

    • @metrork1
      @metrork1 Před 2 lety +1

      You got ripped off at that price. Check out eBay

  • @marciajohnson5844
    @marciajohnson5844 Před 3 lety

    @SwapPart what is the voltage that I would use on a multimeter to check the LED strips for a TV cuz I'm having a hard time trying to figure that part out and I would like to know what exact voltage am I supposed to use I have an element 50-inch TV

  • @santoshkumarjha1979
    @santoshkumarjha1979 Před 6 lety

    From where can I get backlight strips for sony bravia tv

  • @kevinhancock4064
    @kevinhancock4064 Před 5 lety

    That's cool and it's safety solder onto a battery ? Be cheaper than a tester could you hottest the whole strip ? Say if it were 6 leds 6x 3.2 volts? Just curious great video thanks I just ordered an inverter as it were cheap if that don't solbethe issue i will be testing the l.e.d's

  • @MANISHH
    @MANISHH Před 8 lety

    unable to find those 2 points for needles... what to do??

  • @brownjumbotv7256
    @brownjumbotv7256 Před 2 lety

    What is the voltage range per lamp or led in a strip?

  • @johntorres5442
    @johntorres5442 Před 4 lety

    What happen if you remove the button like glass does it still work as an led?

  • @royboy6180
    @royboy6180 Před 5 lety

    Was Wondering, what Burns out this leds if multipple are dead? whats stoppin them from burning out right away? Also Does Wrinkles in The White Paper that covers the leds affect the picture when put back together? Thanks

  • @winstonclarke9221
    @winstonclarke9221 Před 3 lety

    Nicely Done👍.

  • @saarike
    @saarike Před 2 lety

    Excellent! Thank you.

  • @josephsepe9186
    @josephsepe9186 Před 8 lety

    what if u see leds work ? what is issue then

  • @noelsaludares4652
    @noelsaludares4652 Před 4 lety

    TY so much i have learn how to test led. Thanks a lot

  • @timunksatriabatam9574
    @timunksatriabatam9574 Před 4 lety

    Very good. Thank you dear

  • @193mirza
    @193mirza Před 2 lety

    nice video

  • @royboy6180
    @royboy6180 Před 5 lety

    Hello There,
    What Causes these Strips or Single Diodes to burn out? Especially in So Short of Time, Like a year or 2 Usually?
    Also if i replace the strips is it Likely They will they burn out again in the same amount of time has the 1st time?
    I Also would like to fix the Issue that is causes the (Strips or Single Diodes) to burn out in the first place, So I Dont Have To Replace So Often.
    Really Would Appreciate Any Tips or Ideas u Guys Could Share!
    Working on a -----> TCL 65S401TKAA 65" 4K Ultra HD Roku Smart LED HDTV
    Thanks Alot in Advance For Your Time!!!

  • @perryedwards3045
    @perryedwards3045 Před 5 lety +1

    I used your tip about the 9volt batteries and it worked perfect! Thanks, you saved my 55 inch Hitachi from the garbage.

  • @jay22alco
    @jay22alco Před 3 lety

    when to use this? I lost my mutlimeter and I don't have a tester for backlit. hey, I have a 4.2v battery and it worked. I also try lighting individual led for a split second enough to determine if their working. sometimes it will light but very dim indicating the led is also bad. make sure to use a shades, it hurt my eyes after checking through all them and the last one I checked is the bad one.

  • @jasongoestohell123
    @jasongoestohell123 Před 7 lety

    thanks

  • @rarelectronicstv
    @rarelectronicstv Před rokem

    Nice tuturial sir..i watching from the philippines...thanks

  • @ThePHILALLENSHOW
    @ThePHILALLENSHOW Před 8 lety +2

    you must have the magic touch tried it did not work for me

  • @abdulmajidmahvy2909
    @abdulmajidmahvy2909 Před 6 lety +2

    I JUST MADE TESTER WITH 12 0 12 TRANSFORMER 500 MA. I GOT 32 V.WITH BRIDGE RECITATION AND JUST ADDED 1WATT 1K RESISTOR AT +SIDE FOR CURRENT LIMITING AND WORKING WELL!

  • @markfothebeast
    @markfothebeast Před 6 lety

    The aluminum bar is a thermal circuit board. My Vizio 32" LED has 10 lights and draws roughly 29-30v = 2.9 - 3.0v. Repurposing the lights.

  • @thenegotiator9701
    @thenegotiator9701 Před 5 lety +4

    Use maybe the multimeter? There is a function for that

  • @adrianfgaleano
    @adrianfgaleano Před 8 lety +1

    Thank you! I'll try that. I have those led panels from a a broken sony bravia and couldnt make them work by applying voltage at the beginning. I search almost the whole wide web trying to learn the Voltage

    • @SwapPartLLC
      @SwapPartLLC  Před 8 lety +1

      +Adrian Galeano You have to have the correct polarity too. If you don't have enough voltage, you will not get them to light. They are usually 3.2 volts per LEd, so if you have a strip of 10, you would need 32 volts to make them reach full brightness, but they would light with probably anything above 25 volts.

    • @adrianfgaleano
      @adrianfgaleano Před 8 lety

      +swappart.com Thanks! The tv was a KDL-48R475B with 6 leds per strip, 12 strips.

    • @adrianfgaleano
      @adrianfgaleano Před 8 lety

      +swappart.com I've made them work! I have try with 12 volts, never ocurred to me that they where in series or to scratch the paint. Kudos to you.

    • @SwapPartLLC
      @SwapPartLLC  Před 8 lety +2

      If you have some long thin needle probes, you can test with a multimeter on diode test mode. The thin probes can slip right under the lens. You won't get full brightness, but you don't need to. Just seeing any light at all is an indication that it is a good LED.

  • @irishguy200007
    @irishguy200007 Před 2 lety

    Great video but I still haven't a clue where to place tge probes, It's very confusing

  • @douglilley3795
    @douglilley3795 Před 5 lety +7

    Ya can Just use the Diode Function on the meter as it outputs a low dc output :)

    • @Legend-sl9bn
      @Legend-sl9bn Před 3 lety

      How do i do this i only got a cheap multimeter

  • @suyvik
    @suyvik Před 4 lety

    I’ve tested power source with a reading of more than 100v, it’s this correct or do I made a mistake?

    • @ImranAli-rp4kd
      @ImranAli-rp4kd Před 4 lety

      Vik San depends how you tested it , 1 whole strip will never be over 100v on backlit TVs but if you got lots of strips and there’s just 2 wires going to power supply or backlight inverter then it’s possible for it to be over 100v

  • @patrickduffy4583
    @patrickduffy4583 Před 8 lety

    I have a vizio e470i I had no picture had sound when tv went out, change the power board had 68 volts at leds1+ and 2+. Still no lights,tested r/s leds, light up, tested r/s and l/s strip together l get nothing. l tested each light one at a time 4 are out, whats got me is why when I test the two strips together, I used two 9-volt batteries wired together. Any leads for me?

    • @TruckingWithJimbo
      @TruckingWithJimbo Před 8 lety

      ever got anything I have the same problem

    • @davidb2438
      @davidb2438 Před 7 lety

      Buy new LED strips and replace. The LEDs are in series, if they are shorted, the rest of the strip lights, if LEDs are open, the strip will not work

  • @MrDriftwood77
    @MrDriftwood77 Před 8 lety

    Is this a side backlight or a behind the panel backlight?

    • @xcross8537
      @xcross8537 Před 5 lety

      MrDriftwood77 yes, it’s very risky procedure especially if it’s not your TV.

  • @HaLo2FrEeEk
    @HaLo2FrEeEk Před 8 lety +2

    I recently (today) took apart a very broken Samsung TV. Can't remember the model number, but it was a bare bones TV. I'm pretty sure it was for commercial use (like in a store or something) because it only had the most basic connections (1x each composite, component, stereo audio, 2x HDMI). Anywho, The screen was completely shattered, but the electronics were in good shape, and the power board was very clearly marked with the pinout of each connection. The LED backlights look exactly like the ones in this video, and there are 4 strips of 8 LEDs each (32 LEDs total), all in series (each LED is in series on each strip and each strip is in series on a "bus board"), but the pinout for the backlight connector indicated 118 volts. Now the connector has 6 pins, but only 4 wires are used and of those, only 2 are actually connected to this bus board (I can see the traces if I hold it up to the light). Given that the circuit board indicated 118 volts, with 32 LEDs, that indicates just under 3.7v for each LED, not the 3.2 that you specified in this video. I tested single LEDs with 3.3v from a computer power supply and it worked fine, and I also tested an entire strip of 8 with 24v (by using a computer power supply's -12v as ground and +12v as positive, so you get a 24 volt difference). Needless to say, this only provides (at maximum) 3v to each LED, and under normal circumstances (my -12v rail wasn't actually -12v, so my actuall voltage difference was only around 20.5v) around 2.5v each. They lit, but pretty dimly. I then went on to power 6 of the LEDs with this 20.5 volts (meaning 3.4v each) and they looked great and handled perfectly.
    Anywho, thanks for the video. I'm gonna look for a way to modify the strips and/or bus board to either have all the LEDs in parallel, or each of the strips in parallel. I recovered the white acrylic diffusion panel, so I'm gonna make a nice-looking light box for the shop :)

    • @irishhandyman2009
      @irishhandyman2009 Před 7 lety +1

      I did the same thing with a year old Vizio 55''. Cant remember the model. The screen was cracked. After removing everything and got down to the LED's I saw that the strips were only held in with 2 way tape. After saving the wire leads to the strips I removed each one. They were paired together with one end having the wire leads, and one end plugged into the end of the other strip.
      TO make a long story short, I built under cabinet lighting, even mounted under the toe kick. Works great. The trick is finding a good power supply. I found that replacement laptop power supplies were perfect. The right voltage and right amperage. Mine worked with 19 volt, 3.42 amp. Found them on Ebay for $7.00 to the door. Considering the price of the TV and only using it just over a year, I figured it owed me something. Hope this helps someone.

    • @coldblackice
      @coldblackice Před 5 lety

      @@irishhandyman2009 Awesome idea!

  • @Pyro17059
    @Pyro17059 Před 8 lety

    Can you replace a single led on these kinds of strips?

  • @jenko701
    @jenko701 Před 8 lety +2

    I had a 10 led section and used 3 , 9 volt batteries in series and it worked great , I did not have to stick in the needles through to the foil and could test 10 at a time. It was easy to find the the bad row then I went one by one.

    • @SwapPartLLC
      @SwapPartLLC  Před 8 lety

      +Jjames Anderson I have done this several times since you suggested it and it is definitely faster.

    • @-COBRA
      @-COBRA Před 6 lety

      3pcs of 9V batteries?

    • @thesinwagin
      @thesinwagin Před 6 lety +1

      That works when the strip lights up. Depending on the type of fault of the led, the entire strip will not light. So you test have to test individually to find the bad one(s)

    • @ampuansiregar1845
      @ampuansiregar1845 Před 5 lety

      Jjames Anderson vbu

    • @kevinhancock4064
      @kevinhancock4064 Před 5 lety

      @@thesinwagin I'm curious why is this ? Wouldn't they all test the same way ?

  • @neilc7259
    @neilc7259 Před 7 lety +2

    A lot simpler method is to scratch the side of the LED strip with a razor blade just enough to expose the copper. Then use your DMM in diode test mode.

    • @liamwatt4840
      @liamwatt4840 Před 4 lety

      You mean the sides of the strip to the left, center or right with positive and negative, as he showed in the video?

  • @GrantsPassTVRepair
    @GrantsPassTVRepair Před 8 lety +2

    Some LEDs use more than 3.2 volts, and some of them integrate 3 LEDs in one so they use 3 times the current.

  • @dontounsley813
    @dontounsley813 Před 8 lety

    I soldered the two batteries together and stabbed all over my both sides of the l.e.d. and switched polarities and still never got anything to light. even tried it on a new strip and nothing. my strips looked different from yours by it didnt seem to have pads like yours. I think mine has three columns running down the strip. But the l.e.ds looked the same as yours. Any suggestions for me?

    • @Measuray
      @Measuray Před 8 lety

      +Don Tounsley - Do you have the battery together in opposite direction? Try touching the pad where the line is visible. Think of the line as a separation and then touch the other one opposite to it.

    • @dontounsley813
      @dontounsley813 Před 8 lety

      +Measuray Frank yes batteries in opposite direction. Second time I put this together. First time I checked it with a multimeter and also came up with 2.9 volts. But on my backlight strip (from an Element 50 inch) it has a positive and negative connector and going from left to right is a line from the positive and negative making three paths(?) across the strip. And in the middle path is where the l.e.d.s are soldered. I dont see any up and down lines in those paths to separate into pads though.even still I have put probes on either side of the l.e.d.s as well as on opposite sides using all combinations of two of three as being neg or pos. If that makes any sense?

    • @dontounsley813
      @dontounsley813 Před 8 lety

      +Measuray Frank it would be easier if I could show you a picture. Is there a way to send a pic in my reply?

  • @peshmadscientist1833
    @peshmadscientist1833 Před 8 lety +1

    should always use a dropping resistor when testing LEDs. they ARE diodes, so for 2cells, {3v} maybe just 10 ohms.

    • @cpcnw
      @cpcnw Před 3 lety

      Yep, learnt the hard way. Two Duracell at 3v left it on a bit too long and there was a strange smell. Then I noticed the led was dim :(

  • @josearmandogomezsantos7760

    if i have a battery of 5 volts and the led is of 3 volts the led will burn

    • @SwapPartLLC
      @SwapPartLLC  Před 6 lety +1

      if you don't limit the current, then yes.

  • @petervanmaren6464
    @petervanmaren6464 Před 6 lety

    Why don't he use his Multi meter he has

  • @cherifmellah9664
    @cherifmellah9664 Před 7 lety

    mellah cherif

  • @coolissimo69
    @coolissimo69 Před 3 lety

    You could have done a drawing so would be easier to see it.

  • @foridkhan8490
    @foridkhan8490 Před 3 lety

    led

  • @samj1012
    @samj1012 Před 6 lety

    where did u learn how 2 make tutorials ? MIT ?

    • @SwapPartLLC
      @SwapPartLLC  Před 5 lety +4

      Well, it wasn't the place you learned to read and write.

    • @coldblackice
      @coldblackice Před 5 lety

      @@SwapPartLLC M-M-M-Mic-DROP. 10/10, nicely done.

  • @user-jl2zl9if3t
    @user-jl2zl9if3t Před 8 lety

    bu deyismeyin isulu basga cürdü

  • @wolfgangboettcher3126
    @wolfgangboettcher3126 Před 3 lety

    Was macht der da? Quatsch

  • @bobyla13
    @bobyla13 Před 3 lety

    ooooooof....a lot of bla bla bla!!!!!