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Components normally fail and trip breakers was soon as power is connected. Yours has something happening after 10 minutes as the stove is heating up and reaching the set temperature.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UKoR7pWAHzk
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Pull the TV plug out of the electrical outlet. In fact, pull all plugs from all nearby receptacles. Try the circuit breaker. If it still trips, pull more plugs from the receptacles untill the circuit breaker no longer trips. Reverse the process to isolate the plug that is causing the circuit breaker to trip. Repair broken item.
If there is a short circuit inside the TV, the fuse should normally blow first before tripping your breaker. The only exception is if you have a short in the ac cord or the line filter of the TV set. Have you tried the tv on another circuit to see if it trips that breaker? If not, it could be that your first circuit is close to an overload and the TV is simply pushing the circuit "over the edge".
The only thing i've seen with those Acers that generally cause that is that electrolytic capacitors in the power supply fail causing what you're describing. It would make sense that 3 TVs bought at the same time would have about the same amount of time on them, and are wearing at a similar rate.
Good luck.
I have been an electrician for 11 years and when these breakers came out in 2005 what a nightmare. These circuit breakers are extremely sensitive. They are designed to sense loose connections and to protect your house from fires caused by them. By increasing the load (ie. more lights or tv) it increases the size of the "arc" created by the loose connection and the circuit breaker trips before the 20 amp maximum. What I normally find as the cause is a loose connection in one of the receptacles or switches on the circuit. A lot of times, installers will use the "quick stab" inserts on the back of the outlets or switches instead of the side screws. Usually, if you "side screw" all of the receptacles and switches it will resolve the nuisance tripping. One other item that can cause them to trip is too many dimmers on the arc circuit but it doesn't sound like that is the problem you're having.
If the circuit breaker was tripped, more likely the fuse inside the TV power supply might also be blown. If that is the case there might be a short circuit in the power supply components, more likely on a diode or transistor/mosfet.
Contact these website to see if they have the parts for your plasma.
Good Luck.
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