Hi,
I recently purchased a Phillips P22 100/120W 1.0 Bare Lamp for my Hitachi 62VS69A LCD Projection TV on 2/20/09. Saturday March 14th a circle appeared in the center of the screen. It is a 36 inch circle and color is blue. The corners of the screen area are darker.
What could be the problem?
oaxcbmso
Moderator: Angel
Re: Blue circle
DLPFan,
It seems like your LCD light engine's color prisms are starting to deteriorate due to the heat of the lamp. The lamp is not the issue as this is a common problem on these LCD Projection TVs after 4-5 years. Unfortunately the optical block is the part that needs replacing and it is expensive. I would check with Discount-Merchant.com to see if they have it in stock as they seem to sell them at around $250 to $350. This will save you lots of money!
Look at this post, it seems to have a good explanation of how an LCD Projection TV works:
http://fixyourdlp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=56
It's unfortunate because those particular sets have a beautiful picture that to this date can fairly compete with today's plasma and LCD sets! Good luck..
It seems like your LCD light engine's color prisms are starting to deteriorate due to the heat of the lamp. The lamp is not the issue as this is a common problem on these LCD Projection TVs after 4-5 years. Unfortunately the optical block is the part that needs replacing and it is expensive. I would check with Discount-Merchant.com to see if they have it in stock as they seem to sell them at around $250 to $350. This will save you lots of money!
Look at this post, it seems to have a good explanation of how an LCD Projection TV works:
http://fixyourdlp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=56
It's unfortunate because those particular sets have a beautiful picture that to this date can fairly compete with today's plasma and LCD sets! Good luck..
Re: Blue circle
Awesome. Seems my little drawing is getting a lot of attention!
ovadoggvo wrote:DLPFan,
It seems like your LCD light engine's color prisms are starting to deteriorate due to the heat of the lamp. The lamp is not the issue as this is a common problem on these LCD Projection TVs after 4-5 years. Unfortunately the optical block is the part that needs replacing and it is expensive. I would check with Discount-Merchant.com to see if they have it in stock as they seem to sell them at around $250 to $350. This will save you lots of money!
Look at this post, it seems to have a good explanation of how an LCD Projection TV works:
http://fixyourdlp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=18&t=56
It's unfortunate because those particular sets have a beautiful picture that to this date can fairly compete with today's plasma and LCD sets! Good luck..
--
Eddie
Eddie
Re: Blue circle
//Damaged LCD Color Chips
The light engine for the LCD rear projection television works with three LCD color chips (red, green and blue). Inside the light engine, the light passes through several mirrors and filters which separate the light beam into three beams of light redirecting them to pass through each one of the color chips. Then the three rays of light reach a prism which sends out picture to the screen.
Here you'll see the schematic of the LCD light engine: http://www.oerlikon.com/ecomaXL/index.p ... _projector
Through time the heat of the light beam will start to ware off the chips until they get burn marks causing colored blobs in the screen.
//LCD Color Chips //Burned LCD Chip //Yellow blob in the picture caused by a defective LCD color chip
The light engine for the LCD rear projection television works with three LCD color chips (red, green and blue). Inside the light engine, the light passes through several mirrors and filters which separate the light beam into three beams of light redirecting them to pass through each one of the color chips. Then the three rays of light reach a prism which sends out picture to the screen.
Here you'll see the schematic of the LCD light engine: http://www.oerlikon.com/ecomaXL/index.p ... _projector
Through time the heat of the light beam will start to ware off the chips until they get burn marks causing colored blobs in the screen.
//LCD Color Chips //Burned LCD Chip //Yellow blob in the picture caused by a defective LCD color chip