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Life of a flat screen TV
Sexbomb
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Mines coming up to 5 years old now, anyone know the life of an LCD tv? I've been tempted to change mine as the panel is looking a bit blotchy but I think that was down to being made bad, I can live with it but you do notice on moving live pictures.
Has anyone's tv gone or have you replaced yours within a few years?
Has anyone's tv gone or have you replaced yours within a few years?
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There's no set 'life', just as there wasn't on CRT sets, the manufacturers estimates only refer to the loss of brightness over time, and most sets will have been scrapped long before that theoretical point is reached.
It's unlikely to be 'made bad', FAR more likely is dust/dirt inside the LCD screen - it's a reasonably common 'fault'
Plenty of sets don't make 5 years, particularly the cheap (and cheaply made) ones.
To be fair, yours would probably be considered 'knackered' due to the blotchy screen, but if it's not under multi-year warranty it's more likely to be 'put up with'
Samsung LCD PC monitor (similar to a TV) which gets plenty of use every day still 100% after 10 years - it was expensive when new though.
Maybe it's just you........................;)
Having repaired many Samsung tv's, they are in my opinion just humble ordinary sets, in much the same category as supermarket sets. They continue to use rubbish capacitors for instance.
for some reason I have never figured out yet, people think of them as premium products and pay more for them.
They tend to be nice and shiny
It would be interesting to see the global percentages for returns/repairs of the different manufacturers. I guess the more you sell the more you will see in the repair shop. That alone though does not mean a lot without the failure percentage for global sales.....
I don't believe there is a 'premium' manufacturer out there and they are all fairly average. I can find horror stories for all the manufacturers without trying too hard....;)
I was waiting for 4K sets to come to the masses, but, with the announcement of 8K's I'm getting very frustrated......:(
And people think that's GOOD?
I much prefer my older JVC set with a matt screen finish and matt black cabinet. No annoying reflections. I'm in no hurry to change it.
I hate the shiny black surrounds that seem "the thing" at the moment. They give horrible distracting reflections of anything bright in the room. Worse still, some set's I've installed even seem to have shiny screen surfaces and you get the horrible reflections on your screen.
Once more a triumph of marketing or "trend" over practicality.
And they tend to have great picture quality and features.
It's a pity if their reliability doesn't measure up to that.
Mine is just over 3 years old, with no sign of problems.
Well my father's Sony 32" has just expired after 18 months (bad capacitors), so this isn't limited to Samsung.
He's having a right go at me as I suggested Sony/Panasonic as a way of keeping him out of my hair :rolleyes:
Still, hopefully it should be a cheap fix
I have to confess I'm stunned -- I have not seen a TV fail this early in recent years, and for it to be a top Japanese one as well is something I can't quite fathom.
Are you sure it's bad capacitors? - I've not seen any Sony TV's with poor quality capacitors fitted.
FAR, FAR more likely it's something else.
What model is it?, and what is the actual fault?.
The set will not come out of standby. My father has had the back off it and seems to think that two of the power supply capacitors are bulged (I haven't seen it yet).
It depends what he means by 'bulging', some capacitors have slightly domed tops, which could confuse someone who wasn't an engineer.
'Stuck in standby' is fairly uncommon for Sony TV's, usually the red LED will flash a specific number of times as an error code.