: The technician downloads part1.rar and part2.rar .
: The USB is plugged into the TV. While holding the power button or through a specific key combination, the TV "reads" the file from the USB and overwrites its corrupted memory.
: A technician identifies the board as an MS608 . Because these boards are "universal," they can be installed in many different TV brands (like Sony, LG, or various budget brands). However, the board needs to know it is connected to a 1366x768 resolution panel to display an image correctly.
: They extract the files onto a FAT32-formatted USB drive.
In the world of TV repair, "MS608" is a common model number for a universal driver board, and "1366x768" indicates the screen resolution it is designed to support. The Context of the "Story"
: Firmware files can be large. On forums and file-sharing sites used by the repair community, these files are often split into multiple compressed parts (Part 1, Part 2, etc.) to bypass upload limits. To use the software, a technician must download all parts and extract them together to get the final .bin file. How it is Used