First off, I want to know what you mean by it might have a hot chassis. You believe the hot / ungrounded conductor of your power plug is connected to the chassis of your set? Why would you think that? If thats the case, any exposed metal on the set, including the RF / ANT in connector, can shock you if you touch it. This is an extremely dangerous condition, and is not normal for any set ever made. All you need to do to verify is use a DMM set to AC volts and touch one lead to either the ground or neutral of your AC receptacle and touch the other lead to the threaded/outside part of your RF in connector. If you show line voltage on the DMM, then you are correct and your set was somehow wired incorrectly. If you stand barefoot on the your floor on a humid day and touch any metal part of your TV, it can literally kill you. More likely it will just give you a nasty shock, but it can stop your heart as well.Noswad wrote:
An issue that this tv may have is that it might have a hot chassis. I don't want to be electrocuted and I want to stay safe.
Attached are the schematics for this tv. If anyone could help with this I would greatly appreciate it!
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mUG25o ... p=drivesdk
Thanks
Dawson
As far as tapping the RGB lines on the neck, it is difficult to get a proper picture and is not recommended here because of that and the potential danger of increased Xray emissions from unregulated input signal levels and chance of shock, so you wont get much advice on that here. As far as getting sync, plugging composite sync into the composite video port on a set with video inputs would work, but as yours has no inputs, you would probably have to look somewhere near the output of the RF demodulator to tap in. Wish we could be of more help.