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Solve : compaq monitor? |
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Answer» hi, i'am working on a model PE1160-chassis FS7550/V7550. this an old crt based monitor that has given great service. at the moment it shows a small image both horiz and vert. i've been scouring the internet for a schematic and parts list, to no avail.there is a clue, R446 is burnt. can't find the trouble. does this ring a bell with anyone? any help would help. thanks. p.s. i've fixed a lot of tv's, not too many monitors.It is somewhat against my normal principal to try and discourage someone that wishes to restore/refurbish something to do otherwise. HOWEVER unless there is great nostalgia or an unquenchable desire to repair this CRT monitor i would wonder why you would want to do so. I have 3-4 CRT monitors i would gladly give away to anyone that wanted them to avoid them going to landfills. Many second hand stores also practically give them away. LCD monitors have come way down in price that even if you do have the expertise to repair the unit it will still cost you something and your time (unless either of the 2 previously stated situations exist) has to be worth something. I did do a search on the internet for the model you stated but the number of hits was extremely low (under 6) and they were all in non english languages. Sorry i wasn't of more assistance.truenorth hi truenorth, i understand what you are saying. however, let me say that i'am not that impressed with lcd monitors. i'am a retired field technician. i worked for all the major manufaturers. the idea of tossing a piece of electronic equipment is so against my nature that i feel i have to repair instead of replace. i know that sounds old fashioned, but there you have it. the idea that you repair is so ingrained in me. my time is no longer a factor(thank god), i still get a big kick out of repairing things. at 73 years of age, i guess i won't change ANYTIME soon. i do want to thank you for your response. regards pete g.Having a big advantage over me in advanced years (one year) and as a subscriber to the very same notion as can be readily demonstrated by my penchant for buying old items at garage sales (currently computers )with a view to restoration. I can absolutely relate to your position (hence my earlier stated reservation of my advice). If it turns out to be a vacuum tube issue sometime ago i remember reading that the Russians were actively trying to buy all the vacuum tubes that they could lay their hands on. So if that be so perhaps some searching within a Russian based search ENGINE might find them. Don't know to what extent CRT monitors use vacuum tubes though.I find that LCD displays are generally sharper and of course the units occupy far less space than CRT's and therefore allow more options for their placement. good luck,truenorththe only tube in a crt based monitor is the crt(pix tube). the monitor in question lasted 8 years before it required any kind of service. during that time it was on almost 24 hours a day. there is no lcd monitor now or probably ever that will give that kind of troublefree service. so, while they may be a little sharper and the current technology does not mean there better. however i think we're straying from the original purpose of this post. namely, what the *censored* is wrong with it? pgthe magneto-restriction coil and/or the flyback transformer that powers it has failed.I mean absolutely no disrespect with this post, Pete, and I certainly hope you take none. However, there are components inside CRT monitors that retain a charge even long after they've been unplugged. A charge strong enough to kill a person. |
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