Then I finally got the right cables to test the RGB signal quality, so I hooked up my Genesis and began playing. At some point the phone rang, so I paused the game and left the room to take the call. However, when I returned, there was this rank smell in the game like burning acid. I tried my best to assume it wasn't coming from the TV, but I traced the smell to the vents on the top. I shut it off and have since confirmed (after the smell cleared the room) that the smell originates from within the television.
I decided to be adventurous by opening the system and noticed a suspicious capacitor. For one, it's sitting at an odd angle when I would expect it to be parallel to the components next to it, but more interestingly, the shell appears to be cracked open with some charring at the bottom (this picture was taken after I re-assembled the TV, but you can see the light-blue capacitor I'm describing on the left-hand side of the image):

Now, does anyone have any suggestions for what I can do? First, I'm not certain this is the root cause of the smell; is there a great way to determine the source of the smell? Obviously I don't want to get my face too close to the circuitry while the case is open and the unit is powered on!
As for a fix, I am wondering if it might be as "easy" as de-soldering that possibly dead capacitor and replacing it with a new one. Does anyone have any tips on doing this (or not doing it!), or maybe links to the PVM's service manual?
Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
