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Home > Archive > Cheap Linux Hardware > December 2007 > Monitor suddenly dead
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Monitor suddenly dead
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| S P Arif Sahari Wibowo 2007-12-09, 1:22 am |
| I have been using a Neovo F-419 for almost 2 year without any
issue.
This morning, without any warning, the monitor failed to wake up
from sleep, is stayed dark. Actually, when I woke up my
computer's monitors, I saw a flash of the correct display
content, then the monitor went dark again. I tried several
things and eventually trying it without connected to the
computer at all (Neovo will display an error box in that case),
but it it consistently flashing up for a moment then going dark.
Seems like the backlight failed to start.
So my question:
1. Is there anything can be done with this monitor? If it can be
repaired, any suggestion where?
2. Any advice on what causing this? Any suggestion on what
should I do to prevent this happening again in the future? The
monitor do connect through a surge protector - albeit an old
one. As far as I know there is no electric discontinuity last
night: all electronic with clocks stays on, and the computer -
which stays on overnight and connected to the same surge
protector - still OK.
Thanks!
--
(stephan paul) Arif Sahari Wibowo
_____ _____ _____ _____
/____ /____/ /____/ /____
_____/ / / / _____/ http://www.arifsaha.com/
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| On Dec 8, 11:59 pm, S P Arif Sahari Wibowo <arifs...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> I have been using a Neovo F-419 for almost 2 year without any
> issue.
> This morning, without any warning, the monitor failed to wake up
> from sleep, is stayed dark. Actually, when I woke up my
> computer's monitors, I saw a flash of the correct display
> content, then the monitor went dark again. ...
> 2. Any advice on what causing this? Any suggestion on what
> should I do to prevent this happening again in the future?
Repairing it would cost more than the monitor. Why did failure
happen? Best evidence is the dead body - the reason to have it
repaired. Unfortunately, many repairmen don't have electrical
knowledge - only repair by swapping parts. That would defeat the
purpose of getting it fixed - to learn why this failure happened.
A most common reason for failure is manufacturing defect. Which
part has failed? Only then can we begin to ask why. Others instead
too often quickly blame heat or surges - blame only what they
understand. Rarely. Most likely reason for failure would be a
manufacturing defect in some component. Maybe a $1 part that costs
$100 to identify as defective. And that assumes one has the
schematics.
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