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    #21
    Re: Dell U2413 turning off

    Hi djatila666,

    I just bought a refurbished unit of this monitor and have the same problem. I'm glad I found your post and this forum. Is your monitor still stable now more than 2 months after your last post?

    If so, I'm tempted to try the same fix (versus returning my unit to the dealer and dealing with shipping etc).

    What was the process involved in applying new thermal paste to K15A60U? Is there a recommended method to remove the heatsink (is there any best practice I should be aware of)?

    And is adding the radiator to LD7904jgp7 as straightforward as it sounds? I can look up how to do this, I assume also with some application of thermal paste etc.

    Thanks in advance for any help and for your contribution to this thread!

    Comment


      #22
      Re: Dell U2413 turning off

      Hi misteeka
      My monitor is working good. Look the image.
      That is my repair.
      Attached Files

      Comment


        #23
        Re: Dell U2413 turning off

        I got the same problem.

        - Standby power (5V) still on
        - PS1 (24V): 0V

        Already replaced some following components: 03 schottky diodes (SRF 30-10) + 1 opto coupler at Main Switched PS; IC LD7904JGPN; MOSFET K15A60D at FPC area; 02 MOSFETs K10A60D closely to the main transformer. Nothing changes.

        When used a laptop CPU cooling fan and directed the air flow to the main switched PS area, the screen turned on in 3 seconds.

        I used a meter to check the value of components around the PFC and main switched PS areas. All components seem to be still in good condition.

        Thanks for any help

        Comment


          #24
          Re: Dell U2413 turning off

          check the capacitor if theres a leakage

          Comment


            #25
            Re: Dell U2413 turning off

            Originally posted by gamexciter View Post
            I got the same problem.

            - Standby power (5V) still on
            - PS1 (24V): 0V

            Already replaced some following components: 03 schottky diodes (SRF 30-10) + 1 opto coupler at Main Switched PS; IC LD7904JGPN; MOSFET K15A60D at FPC area; 02 MOSFETs K10A60D closely to the main transformer. Nothing changes.

            When used a laptop CPU cooling fan and directed the air flow to the main switched PS area, the screen turned on in 3 seconds.

            I used a meter to check the value of components around the PFC and main switched PS areas. All components seem to be still in good condition.

            Thanks for any help
            Q971 and Q971 are likely the problem. Gated thyristors that have become too sensistive.
            Last edited by gaijin4life; 10-28-2019, 01:40 AM.

            Comment


              #26
              Re: Dell U2413 turning off

              Originally posted by gaijin4life View Post
              Q971 and Q971 are likely the problem. Gated thyristors that have become too sensistive.
              Meant to say Q971 and Q972. Won't let me edit...

              Comment


                #27
                Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                So replacing the two thyristors are the answer for this problem. Q971 and Q972. Unforunately the original MCR part had a non-standard arrangement of Gate, Anode, Cathode (K) leads, and there are none I could find with the correct order, so you MUST bend the pins to have the right one go to the correct hole on the board, changing the Littlefuse Thyristor from KGA pin order to GAK order to match the original part - you CANNOT use the default arrangement.

                The replacement part you want is Littelfuse S4X8ES2, and mouser.com has them for a 45 cents each - the $7.99 shipping will be the most expensive part of this. I ordered 4 since they were so cheap so I had spares in case I accidentally broke a pin in the bending.

                The data sheet for the part is here: https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...2dfcd1b294.pdf

                To open the case on your Dell U2413, I highly recommend the ifixit kit with the guitar pick things (or actual guitar picks). They get the case open without marring it.

                I've attached a few pictures showing where the parts are on the power supply board in the monitor and also how to bend the pins of the replacement thyristor so it has them in the correct order when you solder it onto the board. This will stick up a lot higher than the original due to the bending (so you don't have any of the legs touch - DO NOT HAVE THEM TOUCHING EACH OTHER AT ANY POINT), but that's no problem.

                Thank you Dell for cheaping out on parts, cutting another corner that your customers have to figure out to avoid throwing a perfectly good monitor away.
                Attached Files

                Comment


                  #28
                  Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                  I have similar problem, black screen, backlight off, power led off, 3 USB ports have 5V, the one with lightning sign dosen't, and I can't turn it on, after 3mins, it will turn on automaticaly, looks like an overheat problem.
                  The monitor will turn off quicker when it's 100% brightness compared to 30%, when the monitor shuts down, I measured standby voltage, it's 5.0-5.2V and not steady, the ps-on signal is below 3.3V and jumping around, the wierd thing is the 24V is present and steady.
                  I don't know if replacing Q971 and Q972 will work, need help, Thanks!

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                    I had pretty much the same issue. The screen would work for a bit, then power off (with the power led blinking) but not responsive. I'd have to wait between 2 and 10 minutes before I could power it on again and this would just repeat after a while.

                    Replacing Q971 and Q972 fixed it for me. Just remember when disassembling start with taking the bezel off. Using a multi-meter to check for shorted pins before putting everything back together.

                    Comment


                      #30
                      Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                      I'm having the same issue (along with a slight pink tint, but that's another story). I assume the aforementioned Thyristor is the answer, but I can't find a UK supplier for it, and I'd rather not pay £12 to import a single Thyristor.

                      In looking for a substitute from a local supplier, is there anything I need to look for/avoid, or will anything work (as long as the specs are identical, and the brand is reputable)?

                      Comment


                        #31
                        Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                        For what it's worth I'll reply to myself to state I eventually used a BT169D, due to its availability, price, and slightly higher junction temperature. Bending its pins from K-G-A to G-A-K required routing the K pin across the other 2, and heat shrink was used to ensure it didn't make contact.

                        So far it appears to have worked, although due to the nature of the circuit I'll only know if the gate isn't opened in the (unlikely) event of overvoltage. Fingers crossed.

                        Originally posted by dotcrawl View Post
                        I'm having the same issue (along with a slight pink tint, but that's another story). I assume the aforementioned Thyristor is the answer, but I can't find a UK supplier for it, and I'd rather not pay £12 to import a single Thyristor.

                        In looking for a substitute from a local supplier, is there anything I need to look for/avoid, or will anything work (as long as the specs are identical, and the brand is reputable)?

                        Comment


                          #32
                          Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                          Hi all,

                          I have two Dell U2413f (rev A01) working fine. Picked up a 3rd from eBay b/c overkill, why not. Well it powers off after about 5 minutes. Cycle power, shuts down after 90 seconds. Cycle power, shuts down after 15 seconds. So I'm thinking it's the same issue documented here. Something is getting too hot.

                          The eBay seller offered a full refund. I'm tempted to ask if I can keep it if they refund me perhaps all but shipping. If I can keep it for super cheap I'll give the repair/mod a try. If they will only refund with a return, then obviously I won't tinker.

                          If I am reading this correctly, I see two possible solutions documented here?

                          @djatila666 had one solution
                          Originally posted by djatila666 View Post
                          It has been running for two days without turning off. I put new thermal paste on the K15A60U and I attached a radiator to the LD7904jgp7
                          @gaijin4life has another solution
                          Originally posted by gaijin4life View Post
                          So replacing the two thyristors are the answer for this problem. Q971 and Q972....
                          Are these both required? Complimentary? Different/unrelated?
                          I'm entirely unfamiliar with soldering so to me the heatsink approach is appealing if it is a fix.

                          Comment


                            #33
                            Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                            Originally posted by dotcrawl View Post
                            For what it's worth I'll reply to myself to state I eventually used a BT169D, due to its availability, price, and slightly higher junction temperature. Bending its pins from K-G-A to G-A-K required routing the K pin across the other 2, and heat shrink was used to ensure it didn't make contact...
                            Dear Dotcrawl, greetings from Moldova! Many thanks for your suggestion/substitution - BT169DH + appropriate pins bending solved the problem!

                            Comment


                              #34
                              Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                              I have the same problem on the same monitor, so it seems this is a pretty standard issue. I just ordered a batch of BT169D myself too and I will post after arrival and fix to confirm.
                              Keep up the good work!

                              Comment


                                #35
                                Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                                Fix confirmed in my case too. Replaced Q971, Q972 with BT169D and it’s running for several hours without problems anymore.

                                Comment


                                  #36
                                  Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                                  Originally posted by gaijin4life View Post
                                  So replacing the two thyristors are the answer for this problem. Q971 and Q972. Unforunately the original MCR part had a non-standard arrangement of Gate, Anode, Cathode (K) leads, and there are none I could find with the correct order, so you MUST bend the pins to have the right one go to the correct hole on the board, changing the Littlefuse Thyristor from KGA pin order to GAK order to match the original part - you CANNOT use the default arrangement.

                                  The replacement part you want is Littelfuse S4X8ES2, and mouser.com has them for a 45 cents each - the $7.99 shipping will be the most expensive part of this. I ordered 4 since they were so cheap so I had spares in case I accidentally broke a pin in the bending.

                                  The data sheet for the part is here: https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...2dfcd1b294.pdf

                                  To open the case on your Dell U2413, I highly recommend the ifixit kit with the guitar pick things (or actual guitar picks). They get the case open without marring it.

                                  I've attached a few pictures showing where the parts are on the power supply board in the monitor and also how to bend the pins of the replacement thyristor so it has them in the correct order when you solder it onto the board. This will stick up a lot higher than the original due to the bending (so you don't have any of the legs touch - DO NOT HAVE THEM TOUCHING EACH OTHER AT ANY POINT), but that's no problem.

                                  Thank you Dell for cheaping out on parts, cutting another corner that your customers have to figure out to avoid throwing a perfectly good monitor away.
                                  Is there any alternative to this transistor?

                                  Comment


                                    #37
                                    Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                                    I have tried to fix this by adding 1K Ohm resistor in parallel, is it good enough soldering?
                                    Is it correct ground?
                                    Attached Files

                                    Comment


                                      #38
                                      Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                                      Originally posted by gaijin4life View Post
                                      So replacing the two thyristors are the answer for this problem. Q971 and Q972. Unforunately the original MCR part had a non-standard arrangement of Gate, Anode, Cathode (K) leads, and there are none I could find with the correct order, so you MUST bend the pins to have the right one go to the correct hole on the board, changing the Littlefuse Thyristor from KGA pin order to GAK order to match the original part - you CANNOT use the default arrangement.

                                      The replacement part you want is Littelfuse S4X8ES2, and mouser.com has them for a 45 cents each - the $7.99 shipping will be the most expensive part of this. I ordered 4 since they were so cheap so I had spares in case I accidentally broke a pin in the bending.

                                      The data sheet for the part is here: https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...2dfcd1b294.pdf

                                      To open the case on your Dell U2413, I highly recommend the ifixit kit with the guitar pick things (or actual guitar picks). They get the case open without marring it.

                                      I've attached a few pictures showing where the parts are on the power supply board in the monitor and also how to bend the pins of the replacement thyristor so it has them in the correct order when you solder it onto the board. This will stick up a lot higher than the original due to the bending (so you don't have any of the legs touch - DO NOT HAVE THEM TOUCHING EACH OTHER AT ANY POINT), but that's no problem.

                                      Thank you Dell for cheaping out on parts, cutting another corner that your customers have to figure out to avoid throwing a perfectly good monitor away.
                                      Thanks this fixed it for me. I tried the other two methods i.e heatsink and adding a resistor in parallel to Q971 and Q972 but both didn't work.
                                      replaced the Q971 and Q972 with B169B and boom it working for 12 hours straight. No heating up and shutting down issue.
                                      Total cost for replacement parts Pkr 25/piece for the B169B. so Pkr 50 for the parts and the rest for the local LCD repairman he learnt a thing and two from this too. Parts bought from https://theicshop.pk/, their store is located in Hall road, Lahore (for any Pakistani reading the forums).

                                      Comment


                                        #39
                                        Re: Dell U2413 turning off

                                        2years later one more monitor U2413F with the same issue.
                                        Only this time the monitor only had standby voltage straight from the power on state instead of shutting down after a while.
                                        These spare BT169D came in handy

                                        Comment

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