Sort of electronic. Fixed the darkness in my garage with some LED strip lights made to look like fluorescent fixtures. Spent a good part of the day putting in boxes, running wire, and getting them mounted. Bright as day in there now.
These caps probably have trouble handling the higher frequencies, but even the originals didn’t last long (no doubt some design flaw). I’m always running the maximum refresh rate that this monitor recommended. I believe a lower rate would put less stress on the power supply, but I found the lower rates were too hard on my eyes. Anyway, I’m satisfied with having several years runtime on a new set of caps, plus I mastered the teardown sequence. It took me less than an hour to be up and running again at a cost of around $10. The main expense is the 100uf 400v cap.Circuits in a CRT monitor that filter power supply ripple at 20 or 40 kHz call for electrolytic caps made for that service. Used to just use the original part number from the failed part, rather than trying to plow through data sheets for the right cap.
Could it be the caps you're using have too much self-inductance for the frequency at which they operate?
Just a thought. Did repair CRTs long enough to watch for quirky type filter caps. Won't get me to mess with one now.
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Uhhh, Johnson Ranger? Too small to be a Valiant.
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