Shinco DVD-8320 Service Manual Download Page 3

CAUTION : Before servicing the DVD covered by this 
service data and its supplements and ADDENDUMS, read 
and follow the 

SAFETY PRECAUTIONS NOTE

 : if 

unforeseen circumstances create conflict between the 
following servicing precautions and any of the safety 
precautions in this publications, always follow the safety 
precautions.

Remember Safety First:

General Servicing Precautions

1. Always unplug the DVD AC power cord from the AC 

power source before:
(1) Removing or reinstalling any component, circuit board, 

module, or any other assembly.

(2) Disconnection or reconnecting any internal electrical 

plug or other electrical connection.

(3) Connecting a test substitute in parallel with an 

electrolytic capacitor

Caution : 

A wrong part substitution or incorrect 

polarity installation of electrolytic capacitors may 
result in an explosion hazard.

2. Do not spray chemicals on or near this DVD or any of its 

assemblies.

3. Unless specified otherwise in this service data, clean 

electrical contacts by applying an appropriate contact 
cleaning solution to the contacts with a pipe cleaner, 
cotton-tipped swab, or comparable soft applicator.
Unless specified otherwise in this service data, 
lubrication of contacts is not required.

4. Do not defeat any plug/socket B+ voltage interlocks with 

witch instruments covered by this service manual might 
be equipped.

5. Do not apply AC power to this DVD and/or any of its 

electrical assemblies unless all solid-state device heat 
sinks are correctly installed.

6. Always connect test instrument ground lead to the 

appropriate ground before connection the test 
instrument positive lead. Always remove the test 
instrument ground lead last.

Insulation Checking Procedure

Disconnect the attachment plug trom the AC outlet and turn 
the power on. Connect an insulation resistance meter(500V)
to the blades of the attachment plug. The insulation 
resistance between each blade of the attachment plug and 
accessible conductive parts (Note 1) should be more than 
1M ohm.

Note 1 :

 Accessible Conductive Parts including Metal 

panels, input terminals, Earphone jacks, etc.

Electrostatically Sensitive (ES) Devices

Some semiconductor (solid state) devices can be damaged 
easily by static electricity. Such components commonly are 
called Electrostatically Sensitive (ES) Devices. Examples of 
typical ES devices are integrated circuits and some field 
effect transistors and semiconductor chip components.
The following techniques should be used to help reduce the 
incidence of component damage caused by static electricity.

1. Immediately before handling any semiconductor 

component or semiconductor-equipped assembly, drain 
off any electrostatic charge on your body by touching a 
known earth ground. Alternatively, obtain and wear a 
commercially available discharging wrist strap device, 
which should be removed for potential shock reasons 
prior to applying power to the unit under test.

2.   After removing an electrical assembly equipped with ES 

devices, place the assembly on a conductive surface 
such as aluminum toil, to prevent electrostatic charge 
buildup or exposure of the assembly.

3. Use only a GROUNDED-tip soldering iron to solder or 

unsolder ES devices.

4. Use only an anti-static solder removal device. Some 

solder removal devices not classified a "anti-static" can 
generate electrical charges sufficient to damage ES 
devices.

5. Do not use freon-propelled chemicals. These can 

generate electrical charge sufficient to damage ES 
devices.

6. Do not remove a replacement ES device from its 

protective package until immediately before you are 
ready to install it. (Most replacement ES devices are 
packaged with leads electrically shorted together by 
conductive foam, aluminum foil, or comparable 
conductive material.)

7.   Immediately before removing the protective material 

from the leads of a replacement ES device, touch the 
protective material to the chassis or circuit assembly 
into which the device will be installed.

Caution : Be sure no power is applied to the chassis or 
circuit, and observe all other safety precautions.

8. Minimize bodily motions when handling unpackaged 

replacement ES devices. (Normally harmless motion 
such as the brushing together of your clothes fabric or the 
lifting of your foot from a carpeted floor can generate 
static electricity sufficient to damage an ES device.)

SERVICING PRECAUTIONS

3

Summary of Contents for DVD-8320

Page 1: ...ad the PRODUCT SAFETY SERVICE FOR VIDEO PRODUCTS section on page 2 of this manual CONTENTS SERVICE PRECAUTIONS 2 3 ELECTRICAL TROUBLE SHOOTING GUIDE 5 15 PRINTED CIRCUIT 16 21 BLOCK DIAGRAMS 4 REPLACE...

Page 2: ...SHIELDS ALSO SERVE AS AN X RAY SHIELD IN COLOR SETS ALWAYS RE INSTALL THEM 3 IT IS ESSENTIAL THAT SERVICE PERSONNEL HAVE AVAILABLE AN ACCURATE AND RELIABLE HIGH VOLT AGE METER THE CALIBRATION OF THE M...

Page 3: ...phone jacks etc Electrostatically Sensitive ES Devices Some semiconductor solid state devices can be damaged easily by static electricity Such components commonly are called Electrostatically Sensitiv...

Page 4: ...F F TRIN GND TROUT UNLD LOAD RMC VFD DATA STB VFD CLK GND 3 5VA 3 5V 24V VCC 5V NC NC SP SP LIMIT GND SL SL TO KEY ASS Y TO PICK UP MECHANISM CHANISSIS XS003 XS004 XS002 TC4W53 Bus of Data Control Sig...

Page 5: ...deo normal Is audio is normal Normal operation Refer to power guide Refer to display guide Refer to open close guide Refer to read disc guide Refer to video guide Refer to audio guide Yes Setting of t...

Page 6: ...l Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No Yes A Power Circuit abnormal Is C320 AC 220V Is C307 DC 310V F301 is open XP302 or XP303 is open Power cord isn t inserted firmly or power cord is open Check commute c...

Page 7: ...ck if voltage of screen F1 and F2 is 3 3V Check if voltage of 32 pin of PT6320 is 24V Check grounded negative voltage of screen F1 and F2 Replace PT6320 Check if connection cord between screen and dec...

Page 8: ...place connection cord Replace motor END Is open showed on the screen Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No No No C Open close abnormal Is there voltage difference in XP003 UNLOAD pin and LOAD pin Check if RMC...

Page 9: ...ead disc abnormal Disc in Fouse on Is laser normal Does the disc turn Can TOC be read Normal Refer to fouse guide Refer to TOC guide Refer to fouse guide refer to laser guide No No No No Yes Yes Yes Y...

Page 10: ...r lolor disappeared during playback Have picture but picture disappearedduring playback END Check jack of output board or replace decoder ass y Replace decoder ass y Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes No Scart...

Page 11: ...l Yes No Yes No No Yes Replace transistoe Check if voltage of R L pin or AKM4384 is normal Is N1 signal output Check NJM4558 and peripheral components Check AKM4384 and peripheral components Is transi...

Page 12: ...and FCS of XS14 Does normal voltage at 14 7 pin of D001 Check connection between 14 7 pin of BA5954 and FCS FCS of XS14 Check if G1 normal operation Check BA5954 and peripheral components Does data o...

Page 13: ...nection between pickup and decoder ass y Replace pickup Does voltage at 125 126 pin of D003 Check connection between 125 126 pin of D2890 and LD pin of XS14 Check D2890 and peripheral components Does...

Page 14: ...are different Check connections between BA5954 and XS002 Check BA5954 and peripheral components Check if voltage of 16 pin of D003 is noraml Check connections between 16 pin of D2890 and 4 27 pin of B...

Page 15: ...to decoder ass y Does normal A B C D signal at 97 100 pin of D003 check connections between 97 100 pin of D003 and 5 6 9 10 pin of XS14 Check connections between XS14 and pickup Replace pickup Does n...

Page 16: ...1 POWER s513 R506 10K S511 LEFT RMC500 1 2 3 RMC GND VCC VD506 1N4148 VD501 1N4148 D500 PT6320 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38...

Page 17: ...p VD401 5 6v C420 5n6 C427 22u 16v C428 10u 16v N401A 1 2 4558 3 2 1 4 o1 vdd N403B 1 2 4558 5 6 7 out2 vcc C426 3n9 C416 0 1 R407 10k C406 20p C414 100u 16v R421 10k C417 47u 16v R427 4 7k R428 10k R...

Page 18: ...04 1N4007 C327 470U VD310 SF16 C306 104 VD313 SF16 N301 UC3842 1 C 2 VF 3 CS 4 RT CT Vref 8 VCC 7 OUT 6 GND 5 F301 T1 6A 250V R303 4 7K R323 2W 180K R308 820 N303 7812S 1 2 3 IN GND OUT C308 103 1KV C...

Page 19: ...ITCH GND AGND GREEN GND BLUE R GND GND GREEN BLUE NC NC NC L R216 75 L204 000 R221 10K R220 4 7K R222 390 C209 330p L203 000 R224 390 V203 C8050C R223 390 C219 120p L202 000 L201 000 C210 330p C220 12...

Page 20: ...DVD8320 KEY BOARD DIAGRAM DVD8320M MIC BOARD DIAGRAM SCART 400 OUTPUT BOARD DIAGRAM AD81NAH POWER BOARD DIAGRAM...

Page 21: ...DHB206M SCART DECODER BOARD DIAGRAM...

Page 22: ...Y 1 S2701 7 BATTERY 2 S2672 VDE POWER CORD 1 S8095 DV34N LOADING ASS Y 1 S3024 POWER CORD HOLE 1 S0834e D8320 OWNER MANUAL 1 S2667 SCART WIRE 1 S3022 RCA CORD VIDEO 1 S3035 RCA CORD AUDIO 1 S3145 CC 1...

Page 23: ...0 G0738 RT13 0 167W 15K 5 R506 G0735 RT13 0 167W 10K 5 R421 G0735 RT13 0 167W 10K 5 R507 G0735 RT13 0 167W 10K 5 R423 G0735 RT13 0 167W 10K 5 R509 G0728 RT13 0 167W 4 7K 5 R424 G0743 RT13 0 167W 30K 5...

Page 24: ...Z 63V Y5V C430 a3509 CD110 16V 10u M C307 a3661 CD288 27uF M 400V C308 a2077 CT81 14B 2E4 103M 1KV VD401 a1118 HZ6A3 1 2W 5 6V C309 a3607 CD110X 22uF M 50V V401 a5014 C8050C C310 a3608 CD110X 220uF M...

Page 25: ...YG X202 a6820 SCART SCOKET XS201 a6434 FABSD1652 SOCKET N301 a4721a UC3842B N302 a4571a MC7805CT N303 a4031a MC7812CT V301 a4557a UTC431 V302 a5121 2SK2750 V304 a5114 PC817 V305 a5009 C9014C V311 a510...

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