First post, by vzz
Hi everyone! I've had a 22" NEC Multisync FE1250+ monitor (https://assets.sharpnecdisplays.us/documents/ … 50+_drawing.pdf) with me for a long time. I've moved a bunch of times and I've always kept it around for just-in-case situations. I picked up a few PIII servers last year, added my old Radeon into one of them, and started using this monitor alot more.
After this latest move (to the apartment next door), the monitor took a pretty "nasty" blow from some light wooden bed slats I had leaning against the wall. The room wasn't moved in yet, so this monitor was in the middle of the room and I had a laptop hooked up to it to play music. The bed slats aren't heavy but where one of them landed was the problem. It tipped back inward and its side landed right on the top center of the monitor, while my back was turned. When I turned around, I noticed a faint spark inside the monitor case, then the screen went blank.
I turned off the monitor and turned it back on, but I still saw no image. The power/sleep LED stays solid green (the LED can signal some problems too, but not this), the laptop still detects the monitor and switches resolutions fine (while I remote into the laptop). The screen, however, is not producing that static during startup. I just hear the first click, then the degauss, then a last click, but no other sound.
When you open the case of the monitor, you would see that just about everything is shielded with some metal, except right on top over the high-voltage cable. It is just a strap there, so the bulk of the impact most likely went into the high-voltage cable.
I found the matching service manual and schematic for my monitor (https://elektrotanya.com/nec_fe1250.zip/download.html) and I began probing near the flyback transformer with my multimeter, then I went to some of the smaller relevant transformers. I was finding alot of areas where the DC voltages were not as high as the service manual was saying, and areas where there was no detected AC voltage, which is needed to energize transformers.
I wasn't too sure where exactly to start checking from there. The service manual doesn't have troubleshooting steps. I searched the mainboard's model number online for clues, and found nothing. Then I searched the actual transformer numbers and discovered that some NEC Multisyncs are also Mitsubishi Diamond Pros, with small changes here and there. I found the service manual for a DPro2070SB/FP-2141SB (https://ia802208.us.archive.org/17/items/mits … 41sb_sm%202.pdf) that has schematics showing many of the same chips and pinouts. There is a troubleshooting section in here too.
In the troubleshooting section, I did the No Raster Generated flow chart, and it led me to "Expected failure point: Horizontal oscillation/deflection circuits". I get no AFC signal at all, AC or DC.
I don't have an oscilloscope, so I've been relying on the AC readings of my multimeter to tell that there at least is a pulse, even if I won't get the peak-to-peaks. I did the 3.4.2 Horizontal Oscillation /Deflection Circuit Failure flowchart, and it lead me to "Expected failure point IC601 on the DEFL-SUB PWB or peripheral circuits". Q504's base has given me only 0.13VAC (seems low for 5V 50% duty cycles), and 0VAC on pin11 J601.
IC601 is the deflection processor IC for the monitor. The board that it is on (DEFL-SUB PWB) is mounted on some long headers, and the chip itself is on the bottom side with capacitors in the way, so I cannot probe the chip without fully unsoldering this board. The only ways to probe this chip right now are indirectly via the headers and via some passive components that are on the top side.
I wanted to be sure that there could be a problem on this small board, so I probed some of the headers. HV-BLOCK, HDF, DCC, and EW did not show any AC voltage. I did get something on VDF so this pin is inconclusive without an oscilloscope. I did not check the connections it has to the MPU (IC103) or to VIDEO. So far, I have concluded that the horizontal drive is needed to power the transformers, and this drive comes from the deflection processor.
Is there anyone here that can tell from the service manuals or from experience that the deflection processor board is definitely the problem I am having with this monitor?
I have the mainboard still out and would like to figure out what to do next before I put the monitor back together. I also know nobody with any electronics or CRT experience around my area except for me 🤣. Any input or second opinions on here would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!