Check the back of the LCD panel inside the casing (e.g., HT150X02). Cross-reference this with the firmware source. 4. Risk Warning
This is the most critical part. The 1024x768 resolution indicates a specific LVDS mapping. Even if the board matches, if the dump was pulled from a TV with a different panel, you might end up with an upside-down image or solarized colors. 2. Why a "Dump" and Not Just an "Update"?
Before you flash that FITCO dump, verify these specs to avoid a brick:
You must physically clip onto the memory chip on the board or desolder it to "burn" the image directly. 3. Verification Checklist
Flashing a dump file is "low-level" surgery. If the power cuts during the process, or if the file is corrupted, the board won't post. before overwriting it—sometimes the "broken" file contains unique calibration data or remote control codes you might want to recover later.
Most users look for a USB update ( .bin ), but a (usually extracted as a .rar ) is a full backup of the SPI Flash or EEPROM memory.
Check the back of the LCD panel inside the casing (e.g., HT150X02). Cross-reference this with the firmware source. 4. Risk Warning
This is the most critical part. The 1024x768 resolution indicates a specific LVDS mapping. Even if the board matches, if the dump was pulled from a TV with a different panel, you might end up with an upside-down image or solarized colors. 2. Why a "Dump" and Not Just an "Update"?
Before you flash that FITCO dump, verify these specs to avoid a brick:
You must physically clip onto the memory chip on the board or desolder it to "burn" the image directly. 3. Verification Checklist
Flashing a dump file is "low-level" surgery. If the power cuts during the process, or if the file is corrupted, the board won't post. before overwriting it—sometimes the "broken" file contains unique calibration data or remote control codes you might want to recover later.
Most users look for a USB update ( .bin ), but a (usually extracted as a .rar ) is a full backup of the SPI Flash or EEPROM memory.