How can I replace a Sony TV battery no longer in production?
I have a SONY Wireless LocationFree TV (1st generation) puchased in 2006. The battery no longer accepts a charge, thus the Wireless TV is no longer useable. The battery (BP-1XLa) is no longer available. Any way I can keep the TV out of the landfill? It is a great device; nothing on the market really replaces its function.
Is this a good question?
5 Comments
Sara Horowitz, just wondering if you can provide more info on the model (not just the battery). See if it has a LF or BP number somewhere.
by oldturkey03
Sure: the model number is LF-X1. I know it is a bit of a dinosaur, but it does (at least it did) well what no other device does, which was to easily and flawlessly enable portable TV-viewing. Over time, the touch-screen gave out and could not be callibrated, but we overcame that by controlling it with a SONY remote (from a different device). But just recently, the screen would not charge up and would not run on AC/power. So maybe it's not the battery but something in the connection to the AC charger. (The converter part of the charger heats up when plugged in, so I think that it is working.) Anyway, I've googled likely and unlikely sources for the battery pack and it's not to be found.
by Sara Horowitz
To clarify: the base station is LF-X1. The screen is LF-X1M.
by Sara Horowitz
Dinosaur or not, if it is doing its job, it deserve to be taken a look at ;-) There is absolutely nothing wrong, with trying to maintain older devices, I have plenty of those around. This is what ifixit is all about :-) let's see if we can find some solutions for you. Are you okay with using a multimeter, or know somebody that can help with that? You will have to measure the output of the AC adapter first, just to make sure that it supplies the proper voltage.
by oldturkey03
Thanks, o.t. It is from reading posts on fixit that I got the idea to control the monitor with a SONY remote after the touch screen function gave out, so I am grateful to the people who are so helpful with their ideas and knowledge on this site, and particularly to you for your thoughts on this.
by Sara Horowitz