You know, if I had more time, I really should write a PINNED FAQ about monitors. (Nothing bad about the poster, but it seems the same questions are asked quite a bit about monitors and it would be nice to have all the issues in one spot)
Anyway, if you scour this forum, you will find 2 recent posts by me regarding chassis swapping (keeping a good tube, but putting on a new electronic board rather than repairing a bad one)--that's in "dhansen"'s "Whooo mamaaa" thread. Also a little about swapping tubes in one from last nite (I think the "sparkling" thread?)
In any case:
- No, you cannot ever fix burn in. The best you could do is give an overall burn in by negating the original image (e.g. this is what the Atari 2600 did in "screen saver" mode when left untouched after a while.. It didn't go black rather it pulsed the colors to then give an overall burnin instead of overburning certain spots). Burnin is caused by electrons constantly burning off the layer of colored phosphor on the front of the tube. Once "etched" your only hope is to replace the tube.
- Cap kits only affect the ability of the board to draw on the screen..usually horizontal or vertical deflection issues (eg a scrunched or overdrawn screen, wavy lines, bars on the screen, etc..) They cannot affect anything "within" the tube.
- While chassis (electronic boards) can fail for numerous reasons, tubes fail for only about 4 reasons typically:
a) Burnin. Applies to television too, the difference is there, since the image is always moving you never see "etched" patterns, but if you look and an old tube close up you can easily see burned in tubes vs new ones.
b) Heater-to-cathode-shorts. Basically metal particles fall off the shadow mask on the front of the tube during transport and if tilted fall on the gun portion, OR particles burn off the guns and fall back into them, shorting the "beams" with the "heaters" that keep them warm and ready to draw, causing an overall fog on the screen of a certain color
c) Loss of gun or focus or something else electronic-> (While can be caused by a board, swapping boards won't help). The metal on the guns or grids burn off and eventually cause them to fail.
d) Vaccuum loss. A crack in the neck of the tube/around a wire into it.. Obiously the tube is now toast (and may even give a spectacular fireworks show when connected after it's lost the vaccuum)
To repair your phosphor damage, you just need to find a compatable tube (easy to find, harder to replace), or tube+yoke (easier to replace, harder to find) to pop into your chassis.
OR, you just find any old good tube+yoke, and buy a new chassis for around $75 shipped and reuse your existing frame but throw the bad tube and sell the chassis and yoke on eBay and pay for the new chassis! (Easiest option overall!)
Again, rather than retype the world (until I get an FAQ done), read the "Whoooo Mamma" thread by dhansen and get more info there.
Good luck!