R205 is the circuit ID. So a resister. Can you read the number on it ?
Do you have the circuit ?
Hi Guys,
I was trying to repair an old tv, while removing a Capacitor, I have accidentally burned a tiny component. Please see the image below. Can you please advise what this is called? Can it be replaced?
thanks,
Sam
Last edited by samdiy; 17-04-17 at 07:35 AM.
Look Here -> |
R205 is the circuit ID. So a resister. Can you read the number on it ?
Do you have the circuit ?
The little numbers on the black component itself will tell you the value. There is a chance they are all the same looking at how they are arranged, so if you look at the numbers on the one next to the one that burned, they might be the same. Once you know the value, the part is less than a dollar but you might have to buy 10 of them.
You didn't burn it, you removed it and it is very likely still stuck on the tip of your soldering iron if you didn't continue to use it much.
It could be competely covered in solder.
This does not damage or burn the resistor. They are designed to handle that.
Heat up the iron and flow some fresh fluxed solder over the tip and it may reveal itself. Prod around the tip with a thin screwdriver or something that does not attract solder and you can slide it off.
Otherwise slide the tip along some desoldering wick.
These smd resistors can appear a lot smaller when the are not on the circuit board, so wear some magnifiying reading glasses or something, so you don't miss it.
Last edited by Uncle Fester; 17-04-17 at 12:51 PM.
Update: A deletion of features that work well and ain't broke but are deemed outdated in order to add things that are up to date and broken.
Compatibility: A word soon to be deleted from our dictionaries as it is outdated.
Humans: Entities that are not only outdated but broken... AI-self-learning-update-error...terminate...terminate...
I'm an old fart but with magnifying glasses, good light and a pair of good tweezers I can manage to resolder these little ants okay enough to work again.
So, I think we are looking at a bunch of resistors in series which will reduce voltage. The picture isn't clear but it appears the two each side of the one you removed are the same. You would know better than us on that score. Good bet the missing one is the same as those. Measure across the two each side and get the resistance or match the numbers - same thing. If you have some 1/4W resistors laying around you could solder one of them in or as advised, you have to buy a bunch of them to use just the one ;-(
Good luck!
philbo
well , what do we know? Not that you've given many clues.
It's plasma, It's Panasonic, It's most likely a 2009 early 2010, it's 12th Generation, size and series unknown could be S,G, or V, 10 /15 , 42 -50"
90% of the board number is showing.
In that resistor series, R264,R265,R266,R267
R264 ERJ6ENF4422 M44.2KOHM, 1/10W
R265 ERJ6ENF4422 M44.2KOHM, 1/10W
R266 ERJ6ENF4422 M44.2KOHM, 1/10W
R267 ERJ6ENF4422 M44.2KOHM, 1/10W
Interesting thing here is when you look up that part number, Panasonic quotes 1/8W as the spec, so run with 1/8W at least
also be interesting to hear what blink code the TV was throwing if it's faulted
Last edited by tw2005; 20-04-17 at 08:23 PM.
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