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The listing of any available replacement part herein in no case constitutes a recommendation, warranty, or guarantee by

SAMS Technical Publishing, LLC as to the quality and suitability of such replacement part. The numbers of the listed parts

have been compiled from information furnished to SAMS Technical Publishing, LLC by the manufacturers of the specific

type of replacement part listed.

Reproduction or use, without express permission, of editorial or pictorial content, in any manner, is prohibited. No patent

liability is assumed with respect to the use of the information contained herein.

© 2007 SAMS Technical Publishing, LLC

9850 E. 30th  St.

Indianapolis IN  46229

www.samswebsite.com

Printed in the United States of America  5 4 3 2 1

07PF03377

SAFETY PRECAUTIONS

SET 5266

MODEL

 CZ36V61 (CHASSIS T

AC9922)

TOSHIBA

JUNE  2007      SET  5266

TOSHIBA

Model CZ36V61 (Chassis TAC9922)

5266

  Technical Service Data

SERVICE WARNING

Only qualified service technicians who are familiar with safety checks

and guidelines should perform service work. Before replacing parts,

disconnect power source to protect electrostatically sensitive parts. Do

not attempt to modify any circuit unless so recommended by the

manufacturer. When servicing the receiver, use an isolation transformer

between the line cord and power receptacle.

SERVICING THE HIGH VOLTAGE AND CRT

Use EXTREME CAUTION when servicing the high voltage circuits. To

discharge static high voltage, connect a 10K ohms resistor in series with a

test lead between the receiver ground and CRT anode lead. DO NOT lift

the CRT by the neck. Always wear shatterproof goggles when handling

the CRT to protect eyes in case of implosion.

X-RAY RADIATION AND HIGH VOLTAGE LIMITS

Be aware of the instructions and procedures covering X-ray radiation. In

solid-state receivers and monitors, the CRT is the only potential source of

X-rays. Keep an accurate high voltage meter available at all times. Check

meter calibration periodically. Whenever servicing a receiver, check the

high voltage at various brightness levels to be sure it is regulating

properly. Keep high voltage at rated value, NO HIGHER. Excessive high

voltage may cause X-ray radiation or failure of associated components.

DO NOT depend on protection circuits to keep voltage at rated value.

When troubleshooting a receiver with excessive high voltage, avoid close

contact with the CRT. DO NOT operate the receiver longer than

necessary. To locate the cause of excessive high voltage, use a variable

AC transformer to regulate voltage. In present receivers, many electrical

and mechanical components have safety related characteristics which are

not detectable by visual inspection. Such components are identified by a

# on both the schematic and the parts list. For SAFETY, use only

equivalent replacement parts when replacing these components.

GENERAL GUIDELINES

Perform a final SAFETY CHECK before returning receiver to customer.

Check repaired area for poorly soldered connections, and check entire

circuit board for solder splashes. Check board wiring for pinched wires or

wires contacting any high wattage resistors. Check that all control knobs,

shields, covers, grounds, and mounting hardware have been replaced. Be

sure to replace all insulators and restore proper lead dress.

SAFETY CHECKS — FIRE AND SHOCK HAZARD

Cold Leakage Checks for Receivers with Isolated Ground

Unplug the AC cord, connect a jumper across the plug prongs, and turn

the power switch on (if applicable). Use an ohmmeter to measure the

resistance between the jumped AC plug and any exposed metal cabinet

parts such as antenna screw heads, control shafts, or handle brackets.

Exposed metal parts with a return path should measure between 1M

ohms and 5.2M ohms. Parts without a return path must measure infinity.

Hot Leakage Current Check

Plug the AC cord directly into an AC outlet. DO NOT use an isolation

transformer. Use a 1500 ohms, 10W resistor in parallel with a .15µF

capacitor to connect between any exposed metal parts on the receiver and

a good earth ground. (See figure below.) Use an AC voltmeter with at

least 5000 ohms per volt sensitivity to measure the voltage across the

resistor. Check all exposed metal parts and measure voltage at each point.

Voltage measurements should not exceed .75VAC, 500µA. Any value

exceeding this limit constitutes a potential shock hazard and must be

corrected. If the AC plug is not polarized, reverse the AC plug and repeat

exposed metal part voltage measurement at each point.

Page 1     SET 5266

For a Complete List of Manuals,

Visit www.samswebsite.com

INDEX

INDEX

INDEX

INDEX

INDEX

!IBCGC|05266S

HIGH VOLTAGE SHUTDOWN TEST

Apply 120VAC and turn receiver on. Set all digital customer controls for normal operation. Momentarily

short test point X to test point R. Receiver should lose raster and sound. If the receiver does not lose raster

and sound, the shutdown circuit should be repaired. To resume normal operation, remove AC power and

wait 30 seconds. After restoring AC power, the receiver should power up automatically.

5266

5266

3

High Voltage Shutdown Test .................... 1

Important Parts Information ..................... 1

Miscellaneous Adjustments ..................... 1

Parts List ................................................... 4

Placement Chart ....................................... 1

Safety Precautions ....................................

1

Schematic Component Location .............. 3

Schematic Notes ....................................... 2

Schematics

A/V Switching................................... 3

CRT ................................................... 2

PIP Control ........................................ 2

Power Supply .................................... 2

System Control .................................. 4

Television .......................................... 2

Test Equipment ......................................... 1
Tuner Information .................................... 1

• 

Schematics

• 

Component  locations

•

 

Parts list

Essential  coverage

for servicing a television receiver...

Coverage includes this additional model and chassis:

Model

Chassis

CZ32V61

TAC9920

Representative Model

Summary of Contents for CZ36V61

Page 1: ...h components are identified by a on both the schematic and the parts list For SAFETY use only equivalent replacement parts when replacing these components GENERAL GUIDELINES Perform a final SAFETY CHECK before returning receiver to customer Check repaired area for poorly soldered connections and check entire circuit board for solder splashes Check board wiring for pinched wires or wires contacting...

Page 2: ...y Meter SC3100 Hi Voltage Probe HP200 Accessory Probes TP212 Isolation Transformer PR570 Capacitance Analyzer LC102 CRT Analyzer CR7000 AC Leakage Tester PR570 Inductance Analyzer LC102 Flyback Yoke Tester TVA92 Field Strength Meter SL753 Transistor Tester TF46 Horizontal Analyzer HA 2500 Video Analyzer VG91 TVA92 MAIN TUNER VOLTAGE CHART Pin VHF Low Band VHF High Band UHF Band 1 AGC 1 7V 1 7V 1 6...

Page 3: ...cross bar white cross bar black crosshatch white crosshatch black crossdot white crossdot white h signal black h signal black cross bar on green raster and back to normal picture In some models the audio test signal may not work with the white h signal black h signal black cross bar on green raster test patterns NOTE If a video cable is connected to the video input jack the built in test patterns ...

Page 4: ...TOSHIBA MODEL CZ36V61 CHASSIS TAC9922 SET 5266 Page 1 PHILIPS MODEL 32PT5441 37 CHASSIS L04 1UAA ...

Page 5: ...Page 2 SET 5266 ...

Page 6: ...SET 5266 Page 2 ...

Page 7: ...Page 2 SET 5266 PHILIPS MODEL 32PT5441 37 CHASSIS L04 1UAA ...

Page 8: ...TOSHIBA MODEL CZ36V61 CHASSIS TAC9922 SET 5266 Page 2 PHILIPS MODEL 32PT5441 37 CHASSIS L04 1UAA ...

Page 9: ...Page 3 SET 5266 SET 5266 Page 3 ...

Page 10: ...02 D40 PV02 E36 PV02 E36 PV02 E40 PV03 A14 PV03 C13 PV03 C35 PV03 D36 PV03 E36 PV04 C7 PV04 D35 PV04 D35 Q151 B33 Q152 B33 Q202 B9 Q203 C5 Q204 E49 Q205 E50 Q301 D7 Q360 E2 Q361 C12 Q402 E8 Q403 C23 Q404 E9 Q421 D21 Q460 E5 Q461 E4 Q471 E14 Q472 E14 Q480 C48 Q501 B11 Q501 D2 Q610 B43 Q611 C42 Q612 D50 Q613 C43 Q801 B20 Q817 C50 Q818 C50 Q819 C50 Q830 E21 Q840 C23 Q843 B17 Q862 B19 Q883 C19 Q901 A3...

Page 11: ...Page 4 SET 5266 SET 5266 Page 4 ...

Page 12: ...1 43 5 315V 24082921 C442 2 39 5 315V 24082920 C444 1 0056 3 1 8kV 24082610 C444 2 0062 3 1 8kV 24082611 C467 1 015 3 630V 24095883 C467 2 018 3 630V 24095881 C505 12pF 5 50V NPO 24353120 C801 22 20 125VAC 24095670 C802 082 20 125VAC 24095852 C805 06 01 80 20 250VAC 24092623 C811 12 0047 20 250VAC 24092585 C813 01 20 250VAC 24092586 C865 71 0015 10 2kV 24092347 C893 94 100pF 10 2kV 24092333 C902 0...

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