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This is a known symptom of a failure in the power supply board. Here is a link to a repair guide that shows how to dis-assemble and the unit and then what to look for and replace on the power supply board to bring the unit back to working condition.
Call and get the RMA for your monitor, the problem is in the power supply and it will only get worse. This is a common problem with LCD monitors after 2-3 years of use.
There is a loose connector on the cable or the cable attachment on the PC board. Jiggle the connector as its connected and see if this causes the LCD to fire up.
Normally when this type of problem happens, the first suspect would be the inverter board, then the filter capacitors and lastly the mainboard.
A defect in one of the lamps and faulty inverter IC may cause the display to shutdown as well. If the lamp is defective, it will send a feedback and cause it to stop producing output signal thus the display just shut off once you switch in ON.
Undo what you did & it should hopefuly work.
Next time don't be overconfident and do things that you are not sure of. It doesn't hurt to ask someone who knows. Here you are lucky to escape with this one. I've come across cases where people have ended up short-circuiting their gadgets beyond repair.
If you have the previlege of having a manual, refer it, read every word carefully and then go about doing things on your own.
HI. I had the same problem with mine. It would flash the screen on for a split second and then turn black, the whole time the power light remained green. Upon opening up the case, I pulled the combo power supply board/inverter board out for inspection. I noticed one of the capacitors had a bulge on top indicating it was bad. It was the the 680uf 25v capacitor. I desoldered it, and soldered in the new one. After hooking everything back up, bingo!! Monitor now works perfectly. I couldn't find an exact match to the capacitance locally, but I had a 1000uf 35v cap in my utility box. It worked fine as a replacement. You can usually go within 30 percent of tolerance and be alright. Just don't go under on capacitance or voltage. I hope this helps.
I think it is degaussing problem
if any thing is lying which has magnet
please remove it.
&then put of monitor for 15 minutes & then put on again.do not move when it is on.
please let me if it gets ok
good luck
Unplug the cable from your PC, if the monitor shows a test image, the monitor is fine and the problem is with your graphic card.
If you dont see nothing on-screen after unpluging the cable from the PC, then the monitor in damaged. Send it to repair.
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