Most Element TV power issues come from standby lock, bad power sources, or input/CEC conflicts; try a 60-second power reset and source check first.
What That Standby Light Tells You
The little LED is a handy clue. No light usually means no power reaching the set. A steady red light means the TV is in standby and waiting for a wake command. A blinking light can flag protection mode after a fault or a firmware hang. Don’t chase codes; use the symptom table below to zero in fast. Start simple and keep tests short and repeatable.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Quick Fix |
|---|---|---|
| No light at all | Outlet, strip, or cable fault | Try a different wall outlet, bypass strips, reseat the power cord |
| Red light on, no picture | Standby lock, remote or IR issue | Power-reset the TV, swap remote batteries, try the TV’s side button |
| Light blinks, clicks, then off | Short, surge, or board fault | Unplug 60 seconds, try again with all HDMI devices removed |
| Light on, sound but black screen | Backlight or picture setting | Flashlight test on a dark screen; raise backlight and brightness |
| Turns on, then off again | Sleep timer, Eco or CEC | Disable timers; turn off HDMI-CEC on the TV and connected gear |
Element TV Not Turning On: Quick Things To Check
Start with simple wins. Work through these in order. Most sets spring back to life after the first two.
Do A 60-Second Power Reset
Unplug the TV from the wall. Press and hold the TV’s power button for 15 seconds to drain residual charge. Leave it unplugged for a full minute. Plug straight into a wall outlet, not a surge strip. Try the power button on the set first, then the remote.
Check The Outlet And Power Path
Plug in a lamp to the same outlet. If the lamp stays dark, you’ve found the problem. If it lights up, run the TV directly to the wall. Some strips trip or current-limit. Reseat the figure-eight power cord at the TV end as well. A loose fit can look like a dead set.
Swap Remote Batteries And Test IR
Weak cells send flaky signals. Replace both batteries as a pair. Point the remote at a phone camera and press power; most phone cameras show the IR LED as a white flicker. If you don’t see it, the remote isn’t sending. Use the TV’s physical button to wake it.
Pick The Right Input
Many “won’t turn on” cases are just the wrong source. Tap the INPUT or HOME button and cycle inputs. If a streaming stick is asleep, the TV may wake to a blank HDMI screen. Land on the built-in TV interface or an input you know is live.
Rule Out HDMI-CEC Conflicts
HDMI-CEC lets devices power up each other. Nice when it works; maddening when a box holds the TV in a loop. Disconnect all HDMI devices and try again. Then reattach one by one. If the issue returns, disable CEC on that device or in the TV settings. For a plain-English primer on CEC names and settings across brands, see this guide from How-To Geek.
Tweak Power And Timer Settings
Open Settings and look for Sleep Timer, Auto Power Off, Power Saving, or Eco modes. Turn them off while you test. Aggressive energy modes can black the screen or shut the set after minutes of inactivity. ENERGY STAR sleep rules cap standby draw, but settings vary by platform and can be touchy in some rooms with long pauses.
Raise Backlight And Try The Flashlight Test
Shine a small flashlight across the screen at an angle while the TV is “on.” If you can faintly see menus or shapes, the backlight isn’t firing even though the panel drives. Raise the Backlight and Brightness controls. If nothing changes, leave the set unplugged a minute and retry.
Try A Different HDMI Port Or Cable
A shorted HDMI cable can keep a set in protection. Move the device to another HDMI port and use a known-good cable. If the TV wakes only with cables removed, you’ve found the culprit.
Update Software If You Can Reach Menus
If the set boots sometimes, run a system update from the TV’s settings. Buggy firmware can hang on wake. After the update, power the set down for a minute and restart. If it still misbehaves, back up any sign-ins and try a full reset from the menus.
Perform A Factory Reset (As A Last Step)
This wipes apps and settings. Use it only after other checks. Menu paths differ by platform; see the reset table below. If the screen stays black and menus aren’t visible, look for a pinhole reset near the ports and hold it for a slow count of ten while the TV is plugged in. For official steps, see Element’s help page for TVs that don’t power on.
Model-Specific Clues You Can Use
Element sells Roku TV, Fire TV, Google TV, and basic models. The guts differ, so the power menu names differ too. The checks above still apply, but reset paths and names change by platform.
Platform-Specific Reset Paths
Roku TV: Settings > System > Power > System Restart for a soft restart. For a full wipe, Settings > System > Advanced system settings > Factory reset.
Fire TV Edition: Settings > Device & Software > Restart for a soft restart. For a wipe, Settings > Device & Software > Reset to Factory Defaults.
Google TV / Android TV: Settings > System > About > Restart for a soft restart. For a wipe, Settings > System > Reset > Erase all data.
Basic Element models: Look for Setup or General in Settings, then Reset or Restore Default. Jot these paths down for reference.
Reset Table
| Platform | Menu Path For Factory Reset | Hardware Reset Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Roku TV | Settings > System > Advanced system settings > Factory reset | Some sets include a rear pinhole labeled RESET |
| Fire TV Edition | Settings > Device & Software > Reset to Factory Defaults | Hold the TV’s power button 10 seconds if menus are frozen |
| Google TV / Android TV | Settings > System > Reset > Erase all data | Unplug, hold power 15 seconds, plug in and retry if stuck |
| Basic Element | Settings > Setup or General > Restore Default | Check for a side or back reset button |
Why The Element Won’t Turn On After A Storm
Power events leave scars. A surge can trip protection or stress the power board so it only works until the next wake. If the set died right after an outage or lightning, test with all HDMI cables removed and the TV on a clean wall outlet. If the standby light still won’t stay steady, the power board may need service.
What A Shop Checks First
Technicians start with voltages on the power supply, then look for bulged capacitors, a shorted LED strip, or a failed main board. If sound plays with a black screen, backlight driver or strips are prime suspects. If there’s no click or standby light even with a good outlet, the power board or a fuse on it may be open.
Repair Or Replace?
For a small set, a power board can rival the cost of a new TV. For larger panels, a basic power board swap can be worth it if parts are available. If the panel is cracked or the backlight array is shorted, replacement gets pricey. Ask for an estimate that lists parts and labor so you can compare to a new model’s price.
Care Tips To Prevent No-Power Surprises
Use a surge protector with a joule rating and a visible status light. Give the set several inches of space on all sides for airflow. Dust the vents every few months. Keep firmware updates on automatic if your platform offers that. Avoid switching the TV off at the wall every night; many platforms need standby power for stable starts and updates.
Safety Notes While You Troubleshoot
Don’t open the back cover unless you’re trained. There are high-voltage sections that hold charge. If you smell burnt plastic, hear repeated clicking, or the set cycles on and off, unplug it and stop. Label your HDMI cables so you can return devices to the same ports after tests. Photograph your settings before a factory wipe so setup goes faster later.
When Support Pages Help
Element’s own help pages walk through power checks and resets step by step. Keep a browser open on your phone while you work so you can match names in your TV’s menus. A general HDMI-CEC guide also helps when one box keeps yanking the TV back to standby or the wrong input.
Quick Recap You Can Try Right Now
1) Unplug the TV, hold the power button 15 seconds, wait 60 seconds, plug into a wall outlet, and power on from the TV’s button.
2) Swap remote batteries and confirm the IR LED flashes through a phone camera.
3) Pick the correct input, or remove all HDMI devices and add them back one at a time.
4) Turn off sleep timers and Eco modes while testing.
5) Update software; if needed, run the factory reset for your platform.
If Nothing Works
You’ve ruled out the easy stuff. Note the model number on the rear label and the serial number. Take a photo. Contact support with that info and a list of steps you tried. If you’re out of warranty and a shop quote crosses half the price of a comparable new set, replacing the TV is the better call.
