Guide to Repairing Everything Electronic 7
prostoalex writes "Silicon Sam's Technology Resource is a collection of detailed guides on repairing pretty much anything that has an electronic component in it: household appliances, audio equipment, AC adapters, CD players, CD-ROM drives, other optical drives, microwave ovens, PC monitors, TV sets, VCRs, remote controls, strobe lights, small engines, lawn mowers, printers and photocopiers. Each guide is not just a collection of FAQ, but a detailed document the size of your average book."
Old site, new name (Score:3, Informative)
Maybe in the past, but... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Maybe in the past, but... (Score:1)
Re:. . .but also in the present. (Score:3, Informative)
Sure, when you fry some custom IC (no doubt unlabeled, potted in epoxy, and impossible to order from the manufacturer, just to make repair more difficult than it needs to be), you're hosed.
But as often as not the parts that die first are the easiest to replace: mechanical bits that wear down, discrete capacitors and voltage regulators that fry, solder joints on connectors that get wig
Re:. . .but also in the present. (Score:2)
As those of us who collect Tek scopes know too well... (you have an equal chance of getting a working all-tube (e.g., 545/547/647) model than a later 5000- or 7000-series, despite the fact that the former are some twenty years older than the latter).
That said, I just this past weekend saved the in-law's 15-year-old microwave. It was totally dead (no display, no interior light) and had no external breaker, but pop the case and there's a 125V 15W fuse on