Its not an Encoder failure! It's a bad capacitor near encoder, C551 for composite output (and CSync on RGB) and C550 for s-video Luma output. Replace both with 220uF/10v to fix for long time (stock 4v are underrated for this console).
absolutely! what's frustrating is that this guy never came back to acknowledge this comment and his video is very misleading for others with the same issue, almost all of the videos on youtube where they tackle this video problem, the solution is to replace capacitors! they never touch the video DAC. even in my investigation of the problem on forums and repair websites, they always point to capacitors.
it's frustrating he never came back to acknowledge these comments! his video is misleading and can send other people down the wrong path. this issue is almost never the fault of a video DAC, it's always the capacitors!
Its not an Encoder failure! It's a bad capacitor near encoder, C551 for composite output (and CSync on RGB) and C550 for s-video Luma output. Replace both with 220uF/10v to fix for long time (stock 4v are underrated for this console).
absolutely! what's frustrating is that this guy never came back to acknowledge this comment and his video is very misleading for others with the same issue, almost all of the videos on youtube where they tackle this video problem, the solution is to replace capacitors! they never touch the video DAC. even in my investigation of the problem on forums and repair websites, they always point to capacitors.
You have a bad video decoupling capacitor, not a bad DAC video.
Replace C550 and C551 (220uf 4v)
it's frustrating he never came back to acknowledge these comments! his video is misleading and can send other people down the wrong path. this issue is almost never the fault of a video DAC, it's always the capacitors!
My ps1 does emit a signal because my tv doesn't say "no signal", but the screen remains dark and it emits a buzzing sound. Any idea what this is?
Cxd2106 are hard to find nowadays ,