content/HPZR24W.rst

Fri, 20 Apr 2018 01:10:33 +0200

author
David Douard <david.douard@logilab.fr>
date
Fri, 20 Apr 2018 01:10:33 +0200
changeset 100
3a4b9ec3c0b0
parent 72
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child 115
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[hp8662a] add pictures of replacement parts in the PSU (part 1)

=====================
 HP ZR24W PSU Repair
=====================

:Author: David Douard
:Category: Electronics
:Tags: ZR24W, PSU, PWB-1336-02, TPS-10036

A friend of mine had a problem with his (a bit old) 24" HP monitor: the device
was working properly, but only for a while (few minutes at most).

Looked like a good candidate for a quick repair, problem being most probably
bad caps are so.

The first step was to find out how to disassemble the down thing, since these
"modern" things are not designed to be serviced and have no screw, only plastic
clips which are so easy to break.

Whatever, I finally succeded in opening the box (with only one or 2 broken
clips).

Overview
========

Inside the beast, the usual stuff under the shields:

- a PSU,
- a main controller board,
- an LCD driver board, and the monitor being a bit old,
- a blacklight HV driver board.


.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/back.jpg
   :alt: Back of the HP ZR24W

First thing, to make sure the problem comes from the PSU, I powered the monitor
from my bench power supplies. I used one output of my HP E3648A to generate the
19V rail that powers the backlight. It was a bit short (CC limited at 16V), but
enough to power the backlight. The second output was used to produce the 12V,
and the 5V was generated by my very old home made PSU.

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/ext_power.jpg
   :alt: Testing the display with my bench PSU.

The monitor was working fine when powered from these PSUs, so the problem was,
indeed, this Tatung PWB-1336-02 switching PSU:

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/psu_top.jpg
   :alt: Top of the Tatung PWB-1336-02 PSU

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/psu_bottom.jpg
   :alt: Bottom view of the Tatung PWB-1336-02 PSU

The design is nice and clean. Electrolytic caps however are not the best ones
(mostly Lelong ones I think), which is not really a surprise in this kind of
device.

At first sight, nothing strike the eye, no leaky cap, no burnt resistor or
PCB...

Not a 10mn fix, in the end.

The PSU generates 3 voltages:

- 5V  @2.7A
- 12V @0.8A
- 19V @3.2A


Finding the problematic power rail
==================================

There is a hard switch on the PSU, next to the IEC socket, and When the power
is on, the 5V is hot, wether the monitor is on or in standby.

When the display is powered on, the 2 other voltages are started.

The pin 10 on the cable between the PSU and the main CPU board is dedicated
to the "power saving" state. It must be high (at 5V, which is always present)
to enable the 2 other voltages.

Note that there are 2 other pins dedicated to power management (pin 11 and 12,
marked as "On/Off" and "Vadj"). But these are directly routed to the backlight
board and take no part in the PSU management.


My first test has been to plug my cheap `electronic load
<{filename}/ZPB30A1.rst>`_ on the 5V with the 2 other voltages stopped.

And I could reliably sink 3A from there. So the problem must be on one of the 2
other rails.

But I also could sink the max amperage from the 2 other power rails (1A from
the 12V and 3.5A from the 19V)...

Ok, so each power rail seems to work fine alone.

But when I sink current from the 5V rail while the 2 other voltages are up,
then the PSU fails after a short while.

I've tried to probe a bit the switching curves using my Rigol DS1054, but the
PSU being "hot" (around 400V), and having no isolation transformer, I could not
probe the signals correctly (using 2 probe and displaying the A-B curve, which
is some kind of a joke on the Rigol, since you cannot hide the A and B curves:
the curve substraction is purely computed from displayed curve. When I found
how useless this was on the Rigol, I had not enough energy to extract my old
`Tek 2445A <{filename}/TeK2445.rst>`_ from under the pile of test equipment
stowed in the closet...)


A glimpse at schematics
-----------------------

At this point, I needed to try to understand a bit the schematic. I wasn't even
sure the problem came from this side of the PSU, it could also be a problem in
the "isolated" part (bad caps, bad optocoupler, bad voltage reference...). I
had checked the main caps, and they seemed to be ok (not quality japanese
brands, but still the correct value and low ESR).


On the live part, before the transformers, there are 2 chips :

- a TNY279PN_ dedicated to the 5V rail
- a CM6807_ for the 19V rail

The 12V is produced from the 19V rail by a small DC to DC converter (FP6185_).

In fact, this PSU design is almost just the 2 application circuits (found in
their respective datasheets) merged together.

The noticable points are:

- The TNY279PN DC input can be come from either the input bridge rectifiers
  (via a diode and a thermistor), or, when powered, by the DC produced by the
  CM6807 via the PFC circuit. So when the CM6807 is down (when the monitor is
  in standby), the DC input for the TNY279 is around 318V, but when the monitor
  is on, the CM6807's PFC circuit rise this voltage to almost 400V.

- The bias winding, normally used to power the TNY279 (to allow a very low
  no-load power consumption, datasheet says <50mw) also powers the CM6807.

  A funny side effect of this design is that the CM6807 cannot be started if
  there is no load on the 5V rail: in this case, the auxiliary voltage of the
  transformer managed by the TNY279 is not enough to start the CM6807.


The application circuits are as follow:

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/tny279_app_circuit.svg
   :alt: Example application circuit for the TNY279PN controller (from the `datasheet <TNY279PN>`_)

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/CM6807_app_circuit.svg
   :alt: Example application circuit for the CM6807 controller (from the `datasheet <CM6807>`_)

In this PSU, the input DC of the TNY279 (the point just before R5 in the app
circuit) in connected just behind the PFC circuit, i.e. just after the D2 diode
of the CM6807 app circuit.

In order for the PSU to generate the 5V rails even when the CM6807 is off,
there is derivated DC input path, from the bridge rectifier to the input DC
rail, consisting in a diode (D922 on the PCB) followed by a thermistor (R915):

.. image:: {filename}images/ZR24W/input_DC.jpeg
   :alt: Input DC showing both paths (yellow: via the PFC, red: the alternate
         path when power saving is on).


Finally, the culprit
--------------------

While testing the PSU powering the CM6807 from an external source, I notices
another strange behaviour: the TNY279 enters a failure as soon as I sink
current from the 5V rail, but it remains faulty as long as I let the CM6807,
thus the PFC running, and the input DC at 400V (instead of 318V when the PFC is
not activated)..

At this point, I though there is not way the problem can come from the 5V
regulation loop, neither from the CM6807 circuit, so the only culprit left
would be either the TNY279PN or a component close to it, a cap (especially the
BP/M one), a diode or a resistor. So I tested these parts (again, to be fair),
and I replaced the cap connected to the BP/M pin. With no improvement, the only
remaining faulty part must be the TNY279PN.

So I decided to buy a couple of them from RS, and 2 days later I replaced it,
which did fix the PSU.

What a tricky half-failing part!




.. _TNY279PN:
   https://www.power.com/sites/default/files/product-docs/tny274-280.pdf
.. _CM6807: http://www.championmicro.com.tw/datasheet/Analog%20Device/CM6807.pdf
.. _FP6185: http://www.feeling-tech.com.tw/km-master/ezcatfiles/cust/img/img/24/fp6185drv02-g1.pdf

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