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Date: | Mon, 14 Dec 1998 21:13:20 -0800 |
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Tony:
Thanks for humoring me. At this point I would suggest ~not~ plugging
that thing in again. Your luck may run out and you could fry something
important.
!!CAUTION!!CAUTION !!CAUTION !!CAUTION !!CAUTION !!CAUTION
Touch NOTHING inside any monitor unless you are qualified.
MONITOR VOLTAGES CAN KILL!!
!!CAUTION!!CAUTION!!CAUTION !!CAUTION!!CAUTION !!CAUTION!!CAUTION
Turn it upside-down and shake it gently. I any thing rattles you might
consider opening the monitor and just letting it fall out. If turning
the monitor upside-down does not result in any noises, I'd say there is
nothing for you to do but take it to a person who repairs them. Now it
gets to be a case of the monitor value versus the repair cost. You do
the math.
Sorry I can't do any better. Maybe someone else on the list might offer
different ideas.
Eric
TONY LODGE wrote:
>
> --Well Eric,
> What you said made me get up and look again,however,there are no pins bent
> or in contact with each other or the metal housing,so I can't imagine what
> is causing the problem.
<snip>
Eric R. Outten 773-978-3478 "typito ergo sum"
[log in to unmask] - Oh! Electronic Solutions, Inc.
8835 S. Clyde Avenue - Chicago, IL 60617-2904
PCBUILD's List Owner's:
Bob Wright<[log in to unmask]>
Drew Dunn<[log in to unmask]>
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