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Bring your Television Back to Life again with TV Fuses from Sears

You go to turn your TV on the same way you do every day. You press the remote control: No response. You push the power button: No luck. You even try switching the plug to another outlet: Still nothing. If it's not a fuse that's blown in your home, then chances are it's a burned-out fuse in your TV. So before you decide to toss out a perfectly good television that won't power up just because of a tiny cylinder, shop the supply of TV fuses at Sears. For a few dollars and a little manual labor, that old tube television or shiny flat-panel will be up and running like new in no time.

Do-it-yourselfers have likely switched out a fuse before, and probably with traditional cathode ray tube televisions. All it takes is a good set of screwdrivers and a brand-new TV fuse from Sears. There's no need to mess with wires, capacitors, inductors or any of your TV's electronic guts; simply pry out the old fuse and pop in the new one. Your television infrastructure or the broken fuse will even indicate the right one to buy, making it easy to shop the various amperages and models among our selection of TV fuses. Once your fuse is installed and your TV function is restored, that old-fashioned CRT television should live a long life with the same reliable picture and operation you've counted on for years.

Today's flat-panel televisions offer additional DIY challenges, thanks to more complex electronics that lend your plasma, LCD or LED displays their lifelike visuals and realistic digital sound. Think about purchasing the proper TV parts and having them installed by an electronics technician, or letting the professionals handle it altogether. Sears carries TV parts used throughout the business, whether you're a tech-support expert working out of a van or you operate a storefront repair shop. We're sure to have the TV fuses your customers need, for huge home-theater models or smaller space-saving screens.

By replacing TV fuses instead of replacing your whole TV, you're also putting reuse/recycle principles into practice. That's one less television left out on the curb and one less hulking piece of electronics heaped on the landfill. TV parts and the repairs themselves are often a fraction of the cost of buying a new TV, which leaves money in your pocket for things like new-release movies or pay-per-view sports on your monthly cable bill. You don't need to know about circuit boards and transistors to get years of enjoyment from your television set; you just need to take care of the TV you have.

So get the gloves on and get inside that television casing, or get on the phone and line up some expert customer service the next time one of your TV fuses fizzles. Most importantly, find whatever you need to keep your tube or flat-panel television in tip-top shape when you shop for TV parts at Sears.