- Oct 9, 2002
- 28,298
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I opened it up and tested continuity on an opaque fuse and determined that it is blown. I shorted the socket with a screwdriver and the monitor works just fine. The fuse indicates 240V, but the amperage is not indicated. A label on the back of the monitor housing says "100-240V ~2.0 Amps"
On another note...
Display manufacturer's *really* p.ss me off. Originally, most monitors had detachable VGA cables. This was necessary because the pins inside the connector could be easily crushed. When CRT's started to get (*slightly*) cheaper, nearly every monitor manufacturer made the cables permanently attached. Considering that monitors are not user-serviceable due to high voltage capacitance even after power is disconnected, this is absolutely intolerable. Manufacturers profit because users have to buy entirely new displays when a cable is damaged. Manufacturers will always hide behind "signal-quality" as their excuse for this action, but the most high-end monitors are still the ones with detachable cables! A more broad trend in the electronics industry is to hide fuses inside a non-user-servicable device. A simple panel cover giving the user access to the fuse is all that is necessary. A fuse is designed to protect a device; but when it serves it's purpose, the device must be "repaired" by a qualified technician?! My monitor is long out-of-warranty! They would have me pay a huge fee just to open it up and insert a $.10 piece of glass and metal? Capitalism is fine, but this is simple greed. Manufacturers should be monitored and repremanded by international agencies.
Grrrr:|
/rant
On another note...
Display manufacturer's *really* p.ss me off. Originally, most monitors had detachable VGA cables. This was necessary because the pins inside the connector could be easily crushed. When CRT's started to get (*slightly*) cheaper, nearly every monitor manufacturer made the cables permanently attached. Considering that monitors are not user-serviceable due to high voltage capacitance even after power is disconnected, this is absolutely intolerable. Manufacturers profit because users have to buy entirely new displays when a cable is damaged. Manufacturers will always hide behind "signal-quality" as their excuse for this action, but the most high-end monitors are still the ones with detachable cables! A more broad trend in the electronics industry is to hide fuses inside a non-user-servicable device. A simple panel cover giving the user access to the fuse is all that is necessary. A fuse is designed to protect a device; but when it serves it's purpose, the device must be "repaired" by a qualified technician?! My monitor is long out-of-warranty! They would have me pay a huge fee just to open it up and insert a $.10 piece of glass and metal? Capitalism is fine, but this is simple greed. Manufacturers should be monitored and repremanded by international agencies.
Grrrr:|
/rant