I found a page where they SAY they have a service manual to down load
at http://www.eserviceinfo.com/downloadsm/148/Samsung_SV-4000W.html
but where it says NOW DOWNLOADING, nothing seems to download.
I can search on their Samsung page at http://www.eserviceinfo.com/equipment_mfg/Samsung_4.html
but there doesnt seem to be an appropriate one there? Does anyone here
know how to navigate their site?
Doing that downloads something called a .djvu file. which requires
installing Nuance Software .pdf reader.
When you do that, it just tells you that it cant open the mysterious
286kb sv4000w.djvu file you have just downloaded!
That's why intelligent people avoid places like eserviceinfo and the
dozens of sites that give bogus hits on Google.
Instead, go to Elektrotanya. The site is in Poland, the menus are in
both Polish and English. The site sometimes is flaky; as a registered
user (registration is free) I have not had problems downloading when
using a decent browser (FoxFire). For those who are offended by
Polish menues, registration, or Foxfire, I can only say C'est la vie!
http://elektrotanya.com/?q=showresult&megnev=samsung&megnev2=sv-4000&kategoria=&kat2=all
PlainBill
That's because it's not a .PDF file. You need a DJVU viewer:
http://windjview.sourceforge.net/
--
It's easy to think outside the box, when you have a cutting torch.
It opened fine with Irfanview - and is a 14 page schematic.
Page 8 shows a 2A fuse.
When I installed irfanview to read this file as a stand-alone app in
XP, it starts as a DOS box in the screen(??), and OPEN shows the file.
But when I tried to open it, all I got was some arcane error message
telling me that it cant install plug in from home page!
Could you possibly give me some sort of clue as to where on the
various boards I might find this fuse and what it might look like if
it doesn't look like an ordinary fuse please? Is it some sort of
soldered part on a circuit board which simply needs resoldering when
it blows? Or is it an ordinary fuse but underneath something and non-
visible? (I have already taken the unit apart and taken the power
board off and taken it apart and cant see any fuse)
When I installed irfanview to read this file as a stand-alone app in
>Could you possibly give me some sort of clue as to where on the
>various boards I might find this fuse and what it might look like if
>it doesn't look like an ordinary fuse please? Is it some sort of
>soldered part on a circuit board which simply needs resoldering when
>it blows? Or is it an ordinary fuse but underneath something and non-
>visible? (I have already taken the unit apart and taken the power
>board off and taken it apart and cant see any fuse)
There are no pcb pictures but the schematic shows that the fuse is the
very first component in the line from the mains input connector.
Thanks for that, - that was what I thought from p8 but I am not really
qualified to read those diagrams so I wanted to be sure
> That's why intelligent people avoid places like eserviceinfo and the
> dozens of sites that give bogus hits on Google.
Nothing wrong with the service from eserviceinfo, it works well if you
understand exactly what a link is, how to reassemble multi-part archive
files from linked pages, and what a scamming "DOWNLOADING NOW"
advertising banner looks like (to avoid).
Of course, if you want everything on a plate ...
--
Adrian C
eserviceinfo is unusual and a little hard to figure out with respect to
multipart files but I've gotten LOTS of good schematics / manuals there. If
I'd have had to buy them it would have cost thousands. I've spent plenty of
time just browsing for say, "Pioneer amplifier" or the like. Lots of vintage
audio. Good stuff. Did have a corrupted Marantz 1200B manual over there the
other day. Law of averages, I suppose.
Mark Z.
Thank you for that, it was hidden under a curious flexible opaque
plastic cover: Not sure why but I recognised it as soon as you pointed
it out to me.
With a whole lot of unscientific playing around with it (the actual
fuse itself seems OK and I by-passed it with no particular benefit), I
have managed to get the power supply to squeal slightly when turned on
and sometimes the power button with the red LED in it flashes a bit
when turned on or if actually being pressed while the plug is being
plugged in. For a microsecond. Is this symptomatic of a faulty power
supply or of some fault elsewhere which shows up when everything draws
on the power supply? To me, when the light flashes and goes off
almost immediately, it seems that one of the coils within the PS
itself is not giving out enough power to even turn the unit on but
that is my layman's view? After all, it is turned off when the plug
is put in and all that can be drawing on it surely is the LED clock?
(There is of course absolutely no hint of a flash from any part of the
display when the LED on the power button flashes)
If it is the power supply, then replacement is very simple indeed. Not
sure about sourcing it?
1. Put the item away,
2. Flip Burgers for a week,
3. Buy a new one ...
--
Adrian C
The ps is only $34. i only need it to transfer a dozen vhs tapes. it
doesnt seem worthwhile buying a whole new multi-system VHS unit IF the
PS will cure this particular problem?
> 1. Put the item away,
> 2. Flip Burgers for a week,
> 3. Buy a new one ...
>
> --
> Adrian C
OK Adrian, you were right in principal, I was naive
Samsung list it but don't sell it. I would imagine they sold off their
stocks of these VCR parts years ago
I wonder to whom?