P.S. with the exception of buying the AN-xr10lxlp. I don't have $300 right now
Sharp XR10X Lamp mod How to bypass lamp sensor?
#1
Posted 14 February 2008 - 10:31 PM
P.S. with the exception of buying the AN-xr10lxlp. I don't have $300 right now
#2
Posted 14 February 2008 - 10:33 PM
http://www.diyaudio....?threadid=59091
#3
Posted 15 February 2008 - 04:01 PM
jonjandran, on Feb 14 2008, 05:33 PM, said:
http://www.diyaudio....?threadid=59091
thanks
#5
Posted 29 February 2008 - 07:16 AM
jmath15, on Feb 21 2008, 05:49 PM, said:
yo what up
on your sharp pj find the 2 to 5 wire set comming off of the ballast (the small wires) going to the unit (ballast removed) one of those will be a ground , ground it to the chassie on a screw, loop the two circut wires
you,ll have to figure witch one is witch once you do that it should fire up , ive done this with several pj,s with no lamps from ebay
also if your using a car headlight or hid you might want to use a good amperage power source take apart and use a car battery charger one with a 6 or 10 amp switch
any ? ratcliffedon@yahoo.com i got pics of it
#7
Posted 05 March 2008 - 12:18 PM
I'm interested as well on how you did this.
Victor1
My ohp projector :Stripped 15" samsung on a (now dead) dalite overhead
My indoor home theater : Converted 13x12 bedroom theater with 110" 4x3 grey wall screen. Sharp commercial business pj for projection + plus old home theater components. Total price to build, under $2000!
My backyard home theater :One $10.00 NEC pj + whatever free a/v hand-me-downs + free white-painted cardboard panels equals 16:9 165" of outdoor theater goodness!
Ask 970 retrofit :Ask 970 projector- now stripped of original lighting and lcd, coming soon 9" lcd + former ohp lighting using 150hr long-life eyb lamp
#8
Posted 13 March 2008 - 09:39 PM
This post has been edited by jmath15: 13 March 2008 - 09:41 PM
#9
Posted 04 November 2008 - 11:20 PM
jmath15, on Mar 13 2008, 10:39 PM, said:
I am also trying the same. My bulb is not comming up. Could you please explain indetail. if you have pictures please send me.
I am not sure which wire i need to loop ,disconnet or ground. Please help me. I have same sharp xr-10x
#11
Posted 23 November 2008 - 07:27 PM
Oh yea lets get some pics up of this modded xr10x. I'm more than likely going to be following one of your guys's examples. Mine keeps going through bulbs and i'm tired of it..lol
#12
Posted 20 April 2009 - 01:38 AM
I Plan on Making a DIY dual Xenon 7.2" Sharp setup in the Future so if my old professional projector doesn't work right, I'll just go and make a DIY version. If it does work out GREAT , then I'll have 2 projectors both running on Xenon.
#13
Posted 06 July 2009 - 07:55 PM
counterbond, on Nov 23 2008, 02:27 PM, said:
OK! After scouring the net on how to mod my Sharp XR-10X I finally figured it out. First I'm going to give a shout of thanks out to g247 and DAZZZLA for their posts (http://www.lumenlab.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=24791&mode=linear) which helped me put this all together.
For other Sharp XR-10X owners that are wanting to mod theirs either for LED like me or for other cheaper lamps, I have taken pictures of what I did to mine so you can duplicate my success. The goal here is to bypass the lamp detection circuit so that the system will always thinks the lamp is there and lit. jmath15's comment about the photocoupler put me on the right path which led me to the thread mentioned in parenthesis above.
DAZZZLA, on Mar 12 2008, 11:40 PM, said:
Now correct me if i'm wrong but photocouplers, optocouplers, and opto-isolators are all the same thing, on the XR-10X these opto-isolators are located on the bottom power supply board. However, as I point out in the attached photos, the layout is the same as what DAZZZLA was talking about. Once I located the correct opto-isolator I did as g247 said and bridged (soldered together using short wire) pins 3 and 4 (ON THE SIDE THAT SAYS "COLD" EG LOW VOLTAGE SEE PICS). Once that was done the lamp light stopped flashing and stayed green and the system stays on! YAY!
Obviously I started by removing the cover, then as this photo shows, remove the projector's mainboard.

Next I removed the metal panel separating the mainboard from the power board on the bottom.

Next I removed the power board from the bottom chassis, then removed the power board from its housing.

With the power board now separated I was able to identify the lamp circuitry board and the opto-isolators.

Opto-isolator identification (shows which one is the lamp-lit opto)

Solder job of the opto-isolator.

Then I reassembled and it was WORKING!!!!
Hope this helps others out there.
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: The above instructions reflect the steps I took on my projector and do not guarantee your success should you choose to follow the same steps. Modifying electrical systems and components can be dangerous and may damage your equipment or result in bodily harm (e.g. you may get shocked). I am not responsible for any damage you do to your equipment or yourself in the process.
This post has been edited by AstroTech: 06 July 2009 - 10:46 PM
#14
Posted 14 September 2009 - 01:43 PM
AstroTech, on Jul 6 2009, 08:55 PM, said:
For other Sharp XR-10X owners that are wanting to mod theirs either for LED like me or for other cheaper lamps, I have taken pictures of what I did to mine so you can duplicate my success. The goal here is to bypass the lamp detection circuit so that the system will always thinks the lamp is there and lit. jmath15's comment about the photocoupler put me on the right path which led me to the thread mentioned in parenthesis above.
Thanks for this info -- I was able to bypass the lamp sensor on my XR10-X following these steps.
Does anyone have a suggestion for a suitable [cheaper] aftermarket bulb that will fit in this projector? So far I've fitted a G8 ballast with a 100W bulb (~$6.50ea/1000 hours) that works relatively well, but still isn't very bright. I am going to try a T4 type 250W bulb as well before trying to mount two G8 ballasts/bulbs. Great site!!
#15
Posted 15 September 2009 - 12:25 AM
drrtybyl, on Sep 14 2009, 08:43 AM, said:
Does anyone have a suggestion for a suitable [cheaper] aftermarket bulb that will fit in this projector? So far I've fitted a G8 ballast with a 100W bulb (~$6.50ea/1000 hours) that works relatively well, but still isn't very bright. I am going to try a T4 type 250W bulb as well before trying to mount two G8 ballasts/bulbs. Great site!!
Glad to have helped!
#16
Posted 15 September 2009 - 04:08 AM
AstroTech, on Sep 15 2009, 01:25 AM, said:
What type of lamp setup are you using in yours? I've found many other threads (most notably ounvme's infocus topic) and have tried a couple different small halogen sources but still haven't found anything that will work for DLP that strikes a good balance between cost and watchability.
#17
Posted 15 September 2009 - 04:37 AM
drrtybyl, on Sep 14 2009, 11:08 PM, said:
For my setup I chose to ty LEDs instead as they are lower power, lower heat, and longer life (more expensive up front but again longer life).
At the moment I have a 30 watt 1800 Lumen LED ($30 on ebay) attached to an old CPU heat sink with fan. The setup fits perfectly inside and while watchable in low light, isn't quite what I hoped. What I found was that I was losing too much light to the fact that the hole where the light goes through (the little rectangle glass lens setup) is so tiny. I tried removing the lens setup and while it increased the brightness, the lens wasn't there to correctly focus the light onto the DLP screen so I still ended loosing light to around the screen and that didn't look right either. What I've found from other online sources is that I need an additional lens (~$14) directly in front of my LED that will focus it down to the little rectangle. I haven't done that yet so I am unsure as to how much better it will be. The other alternative is to get a more powerful LED (50 Watt 4000-4500 [~$65] lumen or 100 Watt 7000 lumen [~$120]) by which time the loss of the extra light shouldn't be noticeable. Right now that isn't an option for me so I'm just going to get the lens and see how that works.
I'll post pics of the light assembly later and possibly some pics of the projection quality.
#18
Posted 15 September 2009 - 05:06 AM
http://cgi.ebay.com/...id=p3286.c0.m14
What setup do you use to drive your LED? Where have you sourced the lens to focus your LED? Like you, I'm particularly interested in this setup if it can be focused well. Even with 75% light loss, 1200ish lumens using the 4500 LED would be right around ECO mode with the factory stock bulb. And if the LED outlasts the DLP optics by 30 or 40 years...
#19
Posted 17 September 2009 - 08:16 PM
http://www.lightbulb...100w_2n_fsc.asp
I emailed the supplier regarding the lumen rating and got a confirmation that the number is correct and even received a mfger spec sheet from them. I figure it's worth a try for $5. The results I've gotten with the 100W bulb I already have are almost watchable in a dark room, so I figure if the passthrough is around 7-9% off of 7100 lumens the results should be decent enough. There seem to be plenty of other OHP bulbs out there like this one that would put out more than enough light to serve as a properly sized direct retrofit for these DLP projectors, but their lifetime is just so poor.
#20
Posted 02 October 2009 - 01:40 PM
#21
Posted 06 November 2009 - 04:34 PM
GMZombie, on Oct 2 2009, 01:40 PM, said:
Well I managed to destroy my 7100 lumen bulb during removal of the stock reflector.
My retrofitted G8 ballast with 100W bulb using no lenses and the stock reflector does work, but is too dark to be watchable unless the room is pitch black.
If you were to buy one of the 5500-7000 lumen LEDs on eBay you might squeeze 5-600 effective lumens out of it (kinda dim), but it would be as bright as any of the commercial LED projectors out right now that cost big $$..
#22
Posted 07 November 2009 - 04:07 AM
These LED mods can become costly with dissapointing result nevertheless good fun.
#23
Posted 02 May 2010 - 02:53 PM
Recently I went to turn it on but it doesn't light up anymore and giving me red lamp
LED after 5 minutes.
I went through the steps above but the lamp still not turning on.
The pj went to standby mode after 5 minutes. How can I fix this?
If I were to put another lamp in do I use the pj power adapter for the lamp?
Someone told me that the ballast is the problem but I don't know how to mod that.
Thank in advance for the reply.
#24
Posted 31 July 2010 - 03:07 PM
GizmoTech, on 07 November 2009 - 04:07 AM, said:
These LED mods can become costly with dissapointing result nevertheless good fun.
I took High power laser diodes Red, Green and blue out of DVD and blue ray burners and mixed them using splitters from the sleds about 500mw white light I dont know what the lumes are but its brighter than the original bulb see it great in regular light room, when I get time I will post pictures and what dvd sleds I got them from a place called lasersurplusparts.com sells the power supply pcbs for $5 each 3 are needed and a 5 volt 2 amp power supply ( used a switching power supply wall adapter)
the diodes must be heatsinked and I used JB weld to glue optics I used the base of the orginal lamp assembly stripping everything also must use safety goggles with these diode each will burn plastic so one hit and your eyes are done forever they are class 3 or 4 diodes very dangerous I have worked with laser light show equipment for over 20 years and have experience I will repost more info when I have some time off from work

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