S
simba1984
Hi guys.
I'm not an electrician, but am thinking of getting one in regarding this problem and any information or advice would be helpful.
Me and my girlfriend have managed to get through two CRT TVs (one Sharp, one Thompson), both secondhand from relatives, but caused no problems before for about 10 yrs. Both TVs suffered exactly the same problem, they began making a popping, then hissing sound and then the popping sound would occur every second accompanying flashing lines across the screen. My assumption is that a capacitor or something has blown in each of them, but it seems quite unlucky that they should both suffer the same problem just by chance.
They were both placed in multi-adapters, the Sharp was in a cheap multi-adapter from Poundland, so I thought maybe that caused the fault in the Sharp. So when we inherited the Thompson, I invested in a Homebase 6 socket surge protected extension lead, but the same problem happened again after about 6 months. The other appliances in the multi-adapters (including a Wii, Sony mini hi-fi, modem and DVD player) have always been fine.
So I am confused, could it be that our plug is faulty and damaging our TVs? Could it be the environment that the TV is exposed to- for example the room sometimes does get quite humid (from cooking or drying clothes) or could it be that we were just unlucky with these TVs?
Any guidance much appreciated. Thank you.
I'm not an electrician, but am thinking of getting one in regarding this problem and any information or advice would be helpful.
Me and my girlfriend have managed to get through two CRT TVs (one Sharp, one Thompson), both secondhand from relatives, but caused no problems before for about 10 yrs. Both TVs suffered exactly the same problem, they began making a popping, then hissing sound and then the popping sound would occur every second accompanying flashing lines across the screen. My assumption is that a capacitor or something has blown in each of them, but it seems quite unlucky that they should both suffer the same problem just by chance.
They were both placed in multi-adapters, the Sharp was in a cheap multi-adapter from Poundland, so I thought maybe that caused the fault in the Sharp. So when we inherited the Thompson, I invested in a Homebase 6 socket surge protected extension lead, but the same problem happened again after about 6 months. The other appliances in the multi-adapters (including a Wii, Sony mini hi-fi, modem and DVD player) have always been fine.
So I am confused, could it be that our plug is faulty and damaging our TVs? Could it be the environment that the TV is exposed to- for example the room sometimes does get quite humid (from cooking or drying clothes) or could it be that we were just unlucky with these TVs?
Any guidance much appreciated. Thank you.