I should have taken before and after pictures.

hudsmack

Shared on Tue, 02/10/2009 - 12:42

How To Clean Water Out of Your DLP HDTV

Yesterday morning my wife turned on cartoons for our 4 year old son and came back upstairs to take a shower and get ready. I was just finishing getting ready and headed downstairs to grab some breakfast. When I came downstairs, I looked over and my son was sitting right next to the TV. I told him to move back and then I looked at the television, a Mitsubishi WD-57733, which is by no means an inexpensive television.

There was what looked like a big black ink spot, about the size of dinner plate, at the bottom left of the television. I asked him what he did and he told me he poured water on it. I sent him upstairs to his room and was contemplating what I was going to do about this. I purchased a 4-year extended warranty, but after reading the fine print, I found out this is something that would definitely not be covered.

I started my Google search and found out that a screen replacement kit is about $350. This was money that I didn't want to spend. I decided to see if there was anything I could do about it. I removed all what seemed like 900 screws to remove the screen. I figured I would check it out since I was planning on ordering a screen replacement anyway. Once I removed the screen, I placed it face down on a soft fleece blanket that I had laid on the floor, and draped a furniture blanket over the television cabinet to prevent dust from getting inside the cabinet.

I then removed the four padded brackets holding the screen in place and discovered that the screen is actually two plates of some type of plastic. The plates have a circular groove pattern in them and the water was seeping in between the plates and getting trapped in the groove pattern. I grabbed a couple micro-fiber cloths and started drying the water with one. Once I had removed all the excess water, I used a hair dryer on the coolest setting to evaporate the rest of the water from between the two plates.

There was a film left over by the water. I sprayed some Monster Screen Clean and used the other microfiber cloth to clean the film. I then used the hair dryer again to evaporate the rest of the Screen Clean. It looked good so I screwed the brackets back on and placed the screen in place. I put 3 screws back in and decided to test it out before I put all the screws back in. It was a good thing, I missed a small water spot. I took it back off and repeated the process on the small water spot. I put it back on with the three screws to test again and it looked great.

I put the rest of the screws back in place and put the TV back in its original spot. It looks flawless. I can't even tell that there was anything wrong with it. That says a lot. I am very anal about my home theater and even had the television professionally calibrated.

Long story short, I saved myself $350 and my son is no longer allowed downstairs on his own. He can watch all the TV he wants on his Spongebob TV in his play room.

Comments

revslow's picture
Submitted by revslow on Wed, 02/25/2009 - 18:25
Guess I better purchase that razor wire, land mines, and tazer now.
MikeTheKnife's picture
Submitted by MikeTheKnife on Tue, 02/10/2009 - 12:46
If you hadn't been able to dry it, it would have been a terrible shame but I bet it would have been a much more action-packed story.
FreynApThyr's picture
Submitted by FreynApThyr on Tue, 02/10/2009 - 12:50
As soon as you dsaid "I put 3 screws back in and decided to test it out before I put all the screws back in." I knew this story wouldn't help me. I never remember to do smart shit like that. "So I had the entire cabinet assembled before I realized the shelf assembly was upside down and had to disassemble 45 minutes worth of work." That's my kind of story.
Automan21k's picture
Submitted by Automan21k on Tue, 02/10/2009 - 13:22
Reason #55121 not to have kids....we have a Samsung 62" HD DLP...I would die if something like that would have happened to me.

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