How to test LED backlight without disassembly using 9V batteries

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  • čas přidán 7. 05. 2020
  • First: Do this at your own risk. There is high voltage involved in this and you should know what you are doing before attempting this.
    This was done on a 2017 Samsung LED TV Model UN55J6201AF.
    This video shall help you identify the source of your problem. I struggled to find videos that help identify the broken part, so I hope this helps someone with the same struggle.
    There are other videos available that explain very well how to replace the LED strips, personally I recommend this video how to replace the LED strips: • Samsung 60" LED TV - L...
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Komentáře • 47

  • @Pendlm
    @Pendlm Před 3 lety +2

    Thanks, just what I needed!

  • @hadireg
    @hadireg Před 2 lety

    nice way to test! Thanks for sharing. guess when only two wires go to the LED backlight we'll need more 9v batteries...

  • @garciatechnologyservices1633

    Good tutorial. I've seen a few others and all the techs explained there techniques very well, such as you did. But, here is the BUT... What are the common systems of having bad =LED lights/strips. l am a rookie tech so please forgive me if the question is too simple. Thanks for your video.

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 2 lety +2

      The symptoms of bad LED strips is that your backlight is missing. If your TV turns on and stays black, shine a flashlight on the screen. If you see an image, everything on your TV works fine only the backlight is broken.
      Even if only one LED is bad, you won‘t have any backlight - that was the case with mine.

  • @sunildjbakori7275
    @sunildjbakori7275 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice sir

  • @nickhaley1212
    @nickhaley1212 Před 2 lety +1

    What watt does the 100 ohm resistor have to be, 1/4 watt, 1 watt or does it not matter

  • @createspaceone
    @createspaceone Před 2 lety

    i have only 4 wires on the ribbon power cable that power the two strips/sides on my lg, i actually tried this and realised mine would need a lot more than 45 volts to power up, im guessing i would need 10 or 11 of these batteries lol thanks! anyway. probably easier to buy a led tester.

  • @dhoser9296
    @dhoser9296 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent video! Just what I've been looking for, how to test your strips without disassembly. Do you really need the 100ohm resister on the positive connector?

    • @dhoser9296
      @dhoser9296 Před 3 lety

      Just checked the back of my Panasonic TC-39AS530U and mine is setup differently. I don't have a connector like what you show going from the power board to the LED strips. I have a cable from the power board that splits and runs to the main board and also the LED driver board. From the main board I have the ribbon cable running to T-con board the two ribbon cables from that to the LED display...bummer...like your setup better. Guess I'll have to dissemble it and check the strips individually.

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 3 lety +10

      The resistor is for limiting the current. LEDs are diodes and have very small internal resistance in "forward" direction which means the current is barely limited. Too much current could damage the LEDs and I rather played it safe than sorry. I wanted to fix the LED strips, not do any more damage!
      And it was quite handy to simply push the wire of the resistor into the connector :)

    • @jerryo21
      @jerryo21 Před rokem +2

      @@RandomDIY09 couldnt you just use less batteries? (I have no idea how it works just curious) thanks

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před rokem +1

      @@jerryo21 It’s about the voltage in this case. I put them all in series, so the voltage of each battery adds up to the total voltage. You can probably get by with less.

  • @xiaolinhu3906
    @xiaolinhu3906 Před rokem

    Do you need a constant current board or a display backlight belt? We are the manufacturer.

  • @CR125Elsinore
    @CR125Elsinore Před 2 lety +1

    Without removing the panel, how do you know if all of the lights on each strip are working? Trying to determine if my power supply is bad or if I have a partial led outage. I’m getting backlight leds that are cycling from bright to dim on appx 3/4 of the screen.

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 2 lety +1

      Each strip is a series of LEDs and multiple strips are also connected in series. If one LED is defect, the whole backlight will be off (like in my case, one LED was damaged all others were fine). So if you see light, I‘d say your backlight LED strips are not the problem.

    • @irishguy200007
      @irishguy200007 Před rokem

      Your strips are each in parallel??

    • @eroticmasterbaker
      @eroticmasterbaker Před 2 měsíci

      My backlight flashes on for a second when I power up then goes out. I removed the led strip and if I bend it I can get it to stay on. Can I fix that?

  • @rkohland
    @rkohland Před 2 lety

    I have the exact same Samsung as yours with what appears to be the same LED strip out that you had in your video. But I believe each LED strip is made up of two sections, a 3A section and a 2A section. Which section of yours was out? Is there a way to determine this so as to not have to purchase both for the repair?

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 2 lety +1

      In my case I opened it up and took the bad strip out. In fact the LEDs were all ok! I had a disconnect on the copper rails BETWEEN two LEDs of that bad strip. I bridged it with solder and was back in the game.
      When I took the panel apart I did not notice a difference in the strips, they all looked the same to me and they all seemed to be made out of one section.
      HTH.

    • @superduperboyx
      @superduperboyx Před rokem +1

      @@RandomDIY09 Did you record a video taking out the bad strip and soldering it back?

  • @muhammadsyed7981
    @muhammadsyed7981 Před 6 měsíci

    Hi, you have presented an excellent video showing voltages to verify, I dont get backlight at all does that mean Power Board BN44-00667A is bad? I would really appreciate if you could guide.

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 6 měsíci

      While it is possible that only parts of the power board stopped working, you should check if it produces any voltages.
      I would check if the TV’s status lights come on, and check if the TV produces an image. I connected a DVD player and shined a flashlight onto the panel - in my case I could see the movie but without backlight.
      If that works, power is likely not the problem. To make sure, find the connector from the power board. Very close to that connector your board might have test points which are labeled. This is what I measure in the beginning of the video. See if you get voltage there.

    • @muhammadsyed7981
      @muhammadsyed7981 Před 6 měsíci

      Thanks a lot sir

  • @H.DotNet
    @H.DotNet Před 2 lety +1

    How do you come up with 5 batteries x 9 = 45v, not 3 batteries?

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 2 lety

      I measured about 300V, divided by 5 light strips equals 60V. I felt 45V should be enough so I ended up using 5 batteries.

  • @myethiopia6721
    @myethiopia6721 Před 3 lety

    Hi

  • @Bianchi77
    @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety

    I have a symptom, I can get standby mode red LED, when I turn it on Green LED is on for about half second, backlight is on, but return to stand by mode again,
    is it backlight issue ? Nice video, thanks :)

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 2 lety +1

      Don‘t think it is a problem with the backlight in your case. If TV is on and you can see the image with a flashlight pointing at the screen, it would be.

    • @Bianchi77
      @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety

      @@RandomDIY09 do you reckon, what's the issue? Thanks

    • @Bianchi77
      @Bianchi77 Před 2 lety

      @@RandomDIY09 Is it power supply problem for backlight LED ? How much is the voltage needed for backlight LED ? thanks

  • @irishguy200007
    @irishguy200007 Před rokem +1

    What was the problem with the tv

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před rokem

      Screen stayed black after turning the TV on. Shining a flashlight onto the screen I could see images (used DVD as a video source). As the TV was producing pictures just fine, so I started checking voltages and found the issue with the backlight.

  • @alimuhammad.s3013
    @alimuhammad.s3013 Před 3 lety +1

    How can these leds run on 45 volts instead of >200volts

    • @broadcastblk
      @broadcastblk Před 3 lety +3

      Each strip is 45 V. You have 5 strips. 45 x 5 > 200 V

    • @SlawKingOG
      @SlawKingOG Před 3 lety

      @@broadcastblk nice explanation. thanks.

    • @videobrownsville
      @videobrownsville Před 2 lety

      @@broadcastblk arent these 45volt strips in parallel? thats how you were able to light the strips at the connector.

  • @wpgspecb
    @wpgspecb Před 3 lety

    What is the purpose of the resistor ?

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před 3 lety

      The resistor is for limiting the current.

    • @wpgspecb
      @wpgspecb Před 3 lety

      @@RandomDIY09 I ran a bank of 9volts totaling 63 volts to 1 of 3 LED arrays on my TV and got no light. LEDS are known good.

  • @wolfgangboettcher3126
    @wolfgangboettcher3126 Před 3 lety +1

    Sorry I broken plasma

  • @xiaolinhu3906
    @xiaolinhu3906 Před rokem

    Maybe you need a constant current board _! I'm a producer.

  • @balloney2175
    @balloney2175 Před rokem

    I really appreciate your effort, but you keep flipping the connector making it hard to understand the positive vs the negative.

    • @UnacceptableViews
      @UnacceptableViews Před rokem

      he mentioned grey was the positive in this case. if in doubt use a multimeter to determine polarity on the power supply. even if it isn't producing enough to light the strips it will give out enough to determine polarity. cross reference the pinout on the board to that of the strip connector

    • @RandomDIY09
      @RandomDIY09  Před rokem

      I like to help. You are talking about the 9V battery test? The positive is connected to the resistor and it goes (on my TV) into pin hole 1, 3, etc. the negative goes always into the adjacent pin, i.e. 2, 4, etc.
      So: 1 is + 2 is - // 3 is + 4 is - // and so on.
      Each LED strip is connected in series. If one LED is blown, the complete strip won‘t light up.
      Then, all light strips are connected in series again. So you could have only one bad strip causing the complete backlight to fail. The test with the 9V batteries tells me which LED strip(s) are bad.
      Only reason I am flipping the connector is easier access to the pin.
      HTH.

    • @balloney2175
      @balloney2175 Před rokem

      @@RandomDIY09 Thanks a lot! I already bought the led tester before learning from you. I find out that each strip which has 6 LEDs, should be at least 16.3 volts. The bad ones has only 4.5 volts. So I replaced the bad ones, now my TV is working. Your awesome idea can be applied to other projects I am thinking. Thanks, again!