AppleSauce wrote on 2025-04-27, 20:15:
I measured the B+ voltage and found that if I adjusted the horizontal the voltage would drop from 96.7 @ 31khz when its supposed to be 93 in the manual , down to 80ish then would start rising again to the 90s , 100s , 110s , then when it hits 122 the shutdown would happen to be the B+ Limit voltage.
At 25khz it would start at 74 volts when it should be 64 and have a similar issue with the spike to 122 then shut off.
Only at 15khz would the voltage stay at 51.8 , and the recommended voltage is 51.
So you clearly have an issue regarding B+ voltage regulation, and a working safety circuit that kicks in once the monitor notices B+ got severely out of hand. The rising B+ voltage, if measured correctly (i.e. with the correct ground reference) should also affect the horizontal geometry, most likely the picture getting wider.
The schematics show that this monitor actually has two switch-mode power supplies: One that outputs constant voltages (85V, 24V), called K1/K2, and a second supply that outputs a voltage dependent on the horizontal frequency (called C1), controlled by feedback on a contact called C2. The theory of operation seems to be like this: The higher the horizontal frequency, the less magnetic charge is deposited per scanline into the core of the fly-back transformer at a given B+ voltage. The consequence is that during flyback, at a given B+ voltage there is less energy available the higher the horizontal frequency, so B+ needs to go up to have enough power per scanline in the FBT. The regulation occurs using the waveform at pin 6 of the FBT (one of the secondary windings). According to the scope picture displayed next to the FBT, you should get pulses of around 29V there, quite independent of the horizontal frequency. The waveform of that pin is rectified via D2001 and buffered in C2001. The expected voltage at that point is given as "Nr. 12 for TP2002A", and is 25.x volts.
For troubleshooting, you should monitor what happens at TP2002A in case of the B+ run-up. If TP2002A stays at around 25.x volts, or even sinks below that, something in the monitor draws excess power, which is being compensated until B+ hits the safety limit of 122V. On the other hand, if TP2002A rises when B+ runs away, the feedback path from TP2002A into the power supply doesn't work as intended.