Another welcome to our forums. Per
stahlhart's note, I moved your thread to this forum. I also changed the thread title, which referred to the flyback transformer because, AFIK, flyback transformers in CRT monitors are not adjustable, and your own OP and any relevant answers have nothing to do with them.
First and foremost, BE VERY CAREFUL when working on an open CRT monitor. CRT's require very high voltage (25,000 volts or more) so be sure you know what not to touch, and keep all metal objects away from an open, powered CRT monitor. Also, after you power it down, stay away from it long enough for the voltage on the power capacitors to discharge. It could take a few hours. Don't try to discharge the caps with a tool such as a screwdriver. It could end up looking like a used welding rod.
To answer your question, it doesn't matter which you adjusts first. If they're interactive, you'll know as soon as you try to adjust them. Just take your time, and start with small adjustments until you get a feel for how sensitive the controls are.
If you can't bring the picture anywhere near good focus or horizontal or vertical centering, don't waste your time going any further. If your monitor is that old and in that bad a shape, the good news is, Best Buy and some other stores accepts old electronics for proper recycling.
If your monitor is old enough not to have a deguassing control, manually deguassing the CRT is probabaly the most effective thing you could try before doing anything else. You can do it with a motor driven hand tool such as a hand held electric hair dryer or an electric drill. When degaussing, you have to ramp the degaussing field up and down, not turn it on or off quickly.
1. Turn on the device AWAY FROM the CRT.
2. Bring it close to the screen and move it around the face of the CRT. If it's working, you should see moving color swirls following the movement of the tool.
3. Pull it away from the screen before turning it off.
There may also be convergence adjustments for the colors (purity), but I'd probably not mess with those unless you're really sure of what you are doing -- it's much easier to knock those out of alignment than to get them set correctly.
Convergence controls are not that difficult... as long as you take it slow and take note of where you start with them.
You can use NTSC color bars or any image with large blocks of primary colors red, green and blue, preferably against a white background. Look for "fringes" of each primary color at the edges of a block, and adjust each color to minimize those misaligned color edges.
If you really mess them up, as a fall back, you can always reset all of them to the center of their adjustment range and start over.
The real problem with all of these pots is if they become microphonic (subject to change with vibration) or they develop failing or intermittant wiper contacts due to age.
Hope that helps. Good luck.
