Our CP2210 has failed in a way I've never seen, and I am slightly stumped. For the last ~3 days, it was exhibiting a critical "PIB Connection Lost. Power Cycle Projector" fault after a playlist would run automation to arc off the lamp and shut itself down. Last night, that devolved further. I took a moment to back up the config to a USB drive and dump Enhanced Interrogator then power cycled as before... except this time it wouldn't come back up.
The taillights all went solid for a second, then started flickering. At the same time, the TPC backlight was flickering, the AMI POST screen wasn't coming up but it was occasionally beeping as if it was trapped in a startup -> crash loop, and side status lights were all out, save for STBY (green solid), PIB (green solid), and RUN (flashing yellow). I disconnected power immediately, let the projector sit for a while, and reconnected only the 120v and got the same behavior, now only with a single light (RUN) flashing yellow accompanied by in-sync coil whine noises from somewhere in the secure compartment. I disconnected power immediately at that point as well. Step 0 was to take the UPS out of the chain - no luck.
Next step was then to pull all of the cards (ICP, IMS3000, and PIB) to inspect for any obvious damage - I didn't see anything, so I left them out and reconnected power - same issue. For the moment I'm assuming the cards are fine, or at least not at fault, but I don't have a spare machine to test anything in (or a spare TPC). I looked through the interconnect drawing from the service manual, and was able to isolate the Standby Power Supply from everything else (just pulled the IEC from it, disconnected power from the LVPS and Ballast, and powered it from a separate source). This got the TPC to boot, but I wasn't able to get anything useful out of it. With no connection to the rest of the projector and only Standby power, all options for control were greyed out, and the Status page didn't show much of value. I was also able to verify the various green LEDs that should come on with Standby power came on.
Disconnecting the cable that ties the Standby power supply in to the LVPS (001-111351-03) solved the problem (with and without cards) but obviously, the projector cannot boot in that state. Likewise, disconnecting the LVPS from the backplane via the larger Molex connector (J7/P7) but leaving Standby tied into the harness bypasses the issue - again, still no boot. I've verified there's no shorts to ground anywhere that there shouldn't be on both the LVPS side and projector side of those connectors.
My next step is going to be getting the LVPS to kick on at a bench and checking voltages. I'm not sure if a low voltage issue could cause these symptoms? Would an EVB failure of some sort cause this - I know its tied into the LVPS as well as the backplane, albeit on a different connectot. Christie support was stumped as well, they pointed me to the interconnect diagram and sent me on my way. Curious if anyone else has encountered this - without spares to swap in and out, I'm a little cautious of getting too invasive. My best guess is either a bad LVPS or something has failed in a state that the LVPS immediately shuts itself off when power is connected.
Thanks in advance for any insight - this failure is completely new to me!
The taillights all went solid for a second, then started flickering. At the same time, the TPC backlight was flickering, the AMI POST screen wasn't coming up but it was occasionally beeping as if it was trapped in a startup -> crash loop, and side status lights were all out, save for STBY (green solid), PIB (green solid), and RUN (flashing yellow). I disconnected power immediately, let the projector sit for a while, and reconnected only the 120v and got the same behavior, now only with a single light (RUN) flashing yellow accompanied by in-sync coil whine noises from somewhere in the secure compartment. I disconnected power immediately at that point as well. Step 0 was to take the UPS out of the chain - no luck.
Next step was then to pull all of the cards (ICP, IMS3000, and PIB) to inspect for any obvious damage - I didn't see anything, so I left them out and reconnected power - same issue. For the moment I'm assuming the cards are fine, or at least not at fault, but I don't have a spare machine to test anything in (or a spare TPC). I looked through the interconnect drawing from the service manual, and was able to isolate the Standby Power Supply from everything else (just pulled the IEC from it, disconnected power from the LVPS and Ballast, and powered it from a separate source). This got the TPC to boot, but I wasn't able to get anything useful out of it. With no connection to the rest of the projector and only Standby power, all options for control were greyed out, and the Status page didn't show much of value. I was also able to verify the various green LEDs that should come on with Standby power came on.
Disconnecting the cable that ties the Standby power supply in to the LVPS (001-111351-03) solved the problem (with and without cards) but obviously, the projector cannot boot in that state. Likewise, disconnecting the LVPS from the backplane via the larger Molex connector (J7/P7) but leaving Standby tied into the harness bypasses the issue - again, still no boot. I've verified there's no shorts to ground anywhere that there shouldn't be on both the LVPS side and projector side of those connectors.
My next step is going to be getting the LVPS to kick on at a bench and checking voltages. I'm not sure if a low voltage issue could cause these symptoms? Would an EVB failure of some sort cause this - I know its tied into the LVPS as well as the backplane, albeit on a different connectot. Christie support was stumped as well, they pointed me to the interconnect diagram and sent me on my way. Curious if anyone else has encountered this - without spares to swap in and out, I'm a little cautious of getting too invasive. My best guess is either a bad LVPS or something has failed in a state that the LVPS immediately shuts itself off when power is connected.
Thanks in advance for any insight - this failure is completely new to me!
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