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| Done ! ...... steps to safely remove a new 19" monitor in ms pacman videos ! |
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| RayB:
--- Quote from: ctozzi on October 05, 2008, 05:36:21 pm ---It is now in the trash aas the new one should be here next week. --- End quote --- :dizzy: |
| ctozzi:
geez what a can of worms i opened up here, I dropped the old monitor off at a specialty recycling center by my office today. And yes I did realize not to touch anything metal and rubber was ok. I think anyone else who wants to call out on this can, I got it done and those who helped thanks. here is the 2nd video so far. |
| ratzz:
Great video ctozzi -- I love to watch these ... Especially restorations - I wish more of them were made. Good job so far, and good luck with the rest. Can't wait to see more. Ratzz :cheers: |
| ChadTower:
--- Quote from: mountain on October 06, 2008, 10:15:38 am ---Common sense would tell the guy who is afraid of getting shocked to stay away from grabbing the circuit board or anything attached to it. --- End quote --- Really? That thought process, and the same physical handling, would get him hurt if he were decasing a TV. Same "common sense" thought process, right? Just don't touch the PCBs? The difference there is that on a lot of CRT TVs the mounting bracket is live. |
| RayB:
--- Quote from: ctozzi on October 06, 2008, 02:28:18 pm ---geez what a can of worms i opened up here, I dropped the old monitor off at a specialty recycling center by my office today. --- End quote --- yeah no problem. it's just that people like to fix em rather than toss em. Sometimes all it takes is a $12 cap kit to revive a dead monitor (or even less when it's a fuse or single transistor, etc, etc). You could have sold it for $25. |
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