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Old 01-17-2018, 07:50 PM
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CRT discharging: Ill effects?

I already know the answer to this from my own routine of doing this and don't need a lesson in how to discharge a CRT. I just need to ask the question with an audience who is a bit more seasoned and experienced with day to day television and video display maintenance.

I have a friend who says that when you discharge the anode and flyback system of any CRT, regardless of the tube size you must have a resistor inline with the path to ground or else the strong and instant grounding will negatively affect the inner properties of the CRT and how it can act as a capacitor. Furthermore the strong discharge with the flyback has the potential to damage the ultrafine windings of the flyback. The latter I can understand if the set was powered, but for this instance it is not plugged in, or turned on. It's being serviced.

How appropriate does this sound to you old salts who spent a large portion of their lives working on and discharging TV's? Have you ever come across an instance where an instant discharge damaged the unit?
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Old 01-17-2018, 08:06 PM
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It should not harm the flyback at all there is a diode there to block. I'd almost worry about SS diodes being damaged by transients, but HV diodes are usually multiple diodes with parallel capacitance and sometimes resistance to reduce and equalize strain on the diodes.

I've never seen damage from hard grounding the CRT (except for mistakes where technicians reflexes were triggered by discharge through the human body). Sets that are on and have repeated arcing for a few moments can implode...HV arcs get very hot in a concentrated area and glass does not like that...But It usually takes MUCH more than a simple discharge to get there.

The main advantage of the resistance method is that the charge will not bounce back and bite you 10 seconds later. (Had that happen enough to favor resistance strongly.)
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Old 01-18-2018, 07:07 AM
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Never heard it can damage things in abt 40 yrs on the bench.
If you wish discharge it through a HV probe then short out the
last few KV in a few minutes.

73 Zeno
LFOD !
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Old 01-18-2018, 11:16 AM
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I wouldn't trust discharge through a resistor to prevent dielectric relaxation and a charge buildup after a while, unless you leave the resistor connected for several minutes (which you could also do with a plain wire).
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Old 01-18-2018, 11:22 AM
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Hard discharge is harmless, in my 12 years at Philips I discharged over a thousand CRTs with the only problem of not having a good tie to the DAG a few times.
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Old 01-18-2018, 11:27 AM
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This brings to mind the fact that the early color CRTs needed resistors in the HV feed to prevent strong arcs from damaging the guns. Redesign of the CRT's internal discharge path fixed this, but later sets sometimes used limiting resistors to prevent arc damage to other components besides the CRT. If a set has such limiting resistors designed in, it should be able to withstand short circuit discharge when the set is off.

In my earliest job at Motorola, I did arc testing on a new chassis, which was done with the set running for maximum safety factor. The discharge path in a particular chassis can be very circuitous (no pun intended). One Motorola solid state B&W had a problem with CRT arcs killing the sound section. The arc was going into the B+ supply via [Edit: the CRT grid 1 vertical blanking coupling capacitor to:] the vertical sweep transformer, and then through the audio output transistor (no damage along the way) to the audio driver transistor, which it would kill. The initial fix was to use a beefier audio driver, and eventually a choke coil in the driver circuit to squelch the initial transient.
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Last edited by old_tv_nut; 01-18-2018 at 09:08 PM.
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Old 01-18-2018, 07:28 PM
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Thank you for the answers you guys.
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