T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3917.1 | Check out the VIDEO conference for real answer | STAR::ROBINSON | | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:18 | 6 |
| You will get a better answer in the VIDEO conference, but I think
the speakers near the screen are the culprits. The magnets in the
speakers affect the colors etc. (really technical explanation eh?)
Moving the speakers is not enough once the screen is affected.
I think what you need to do is called "degaussing".
Dave (reaching beyond the realm of his expertise)
|
3917.2 | A purity problem???? | DNEAST::SEELEY_BOB | | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:20 | 8 |
| I suppose that it's possible that someone passed a magnetic field
close to the front of your CRT and wrecked the purity. Typically, the
effect of damaged purity is large splotches of color or wrong color
appearing in the image. Something as simple as switching off a
vacuum cleaner close to the face of the tube can do this. You may have
to degauss the tube with a proper degaussing coil. I've used other
sources, but the intense field generated by the coil is most effective.
One small warning, move your diskettes far out of the way if you try this.
|
3917.3 | Klipshman | READ::POMEROY | | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:23 | 10 |
| Too bad Klipshman,
If the Kg4's are the culprits, I understand why. They have massive
magnets in them. If you get them a few feet away from the screen, it
may restore itself at least somewhat over time, but never totally. Dave
(.1) was right, you have to degauss it....
bob
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3917.4 | How much does it cost to DEGAUSS a monitor? | EUCLID::OWEN | I will not instigate revolution | Tue Jul 10 1990 12:37 | 19 |
| Bob,
It was my Fishers, the Klipsch are on the floor (where they belong).
on the other side of the room...
I've had the speakers up there for months at a time... no problems.
There is however, a cable box on top of the speakers, (my room is a
technological wonderland), so I wonder if this had anything to do with
it. Thing is, the cable box is at least 2 feet away from the
monitor...
Also, I've had an Air Conditioner running in the room. It's on the
same circuit as everything else in there, including the computer.
Could this have done it?
Later...
Steve
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3917.5 | I've run into that problem... | FENRYS::mwm | Mike (Real Editors Use Meta Keys) Meyer | Tue Jul 10 1990 14:26 | 17 |
| I was having a nearly identical problem with my 1080 - the color was off in
the lower corners of the display. The tech's looking at it tell me that:
1) The CBM 108x monitors have degaussing hardware in them, so the tube shouldn't
need degaussing.
2) One of the plates in the box to make the FCC happy has picked up a
magnetic field. This is probably the problem.
3) We'll purchase a degausser and do fix it for you.
4) The other problem....
I haven't seen the results yet; they're still working on that other problem.
2.0 is _ugly_ on a monochrome monitor.
<mike
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3917.6 | | GOBAMA::WILSONTL | Tony, the HOSS TRUMPET | Tue Jul 10 1990 14:33 | 8 |
| You can usually carry your monitor to a TV repair shop and have them
degauss it for you. As .-1 said, most monitors (and TV's) made today
have automatic degaussing circuitry in them which is activated when the
monitor's power is applied. Not to mention the obvious, but have you
turned the power off and back on (leave it off for at least 30 to 60
seconds.) ???
|
3917.7 | I remember the Old Days..... | DNEAST::SEELEY_BOB | | Tue Jul 10 1990 15:04 | 15 |
| If the purity has been seriously scrambled, it usually takes a VERY
strong fluctuating (alternating) magnetic field to undo the 'damage'.
I've only seen a couple of monitors that had a degaussing circuit
powerful enough to erase the residual magnetism causing the purity
problem in one power-up cycle. Enough power-up/down cyclings could
eventually undo the effect, but an official degaussing coil is the
preferred way to go. There is a specific technique in the use of a
degaussing coil to insure a clean sweep. This is experience speaking,
since I used to see a lot of T.V. sets with this problem in the Old Days
(you remember them! :')) when I used to work in the 'real' world of
consumer electronics.
Modern T.V.'s had the circuitry built-in for a number of years. I
guess that a lot of housewives used to park and power-off their vacuum
cleaners in front of their sets ;').
|
3917.8 | Electrons don't weigh much; small fields can move them | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Tue Jul 10 1990 19:05 | 19 |
| Re: .*
I suspect the speakers. Move them away, and see if the problem disappears.
A couple of years ago, I had a problem where the color in the upper left
corner of my 1080 monitor was bad. Instead of Workbench blue, there was
a slight, but noticeable orange cast to the color. Slowly, the orange
intensified and spread to a larger area.
The culprit: the Radio Shack minimus speakers I had mounted on the wall
behind the monitor (about a foot away). The orange area was increasing
not due to any increasing damage to the monitor, but because I was moving
the monitor around a fraction of an inch over time. That small change
in distance brought the monitor closer to the left speaker and made the
problem worse.
When I moved the monitor further away from the speakers, the problem
completely went away. There was no permanent damage to the monitor
at all.
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3917.9 | My B&W was magged and distorted the image | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 2285421FXO/28 MicrowaveLogicQual | Tue Jul 10 1990 23:14 | 5 |
| That's good randy, but if the mask is magnetizable, the field can be
static.
The mask is the metal fine mesh that acts as a stencil for the beam f
so that the beam hits the right color phosphors.
Tom
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3917.10 | Everythings hip now... | EUCLID::OWEN | I will not instigate revolution | Wed Jul 11 1990 09:21 | 13 |
|
Well, the problem is fixed... I guess it was the speakers.
They are still above the monitor, but I turned them upside down so that
the big woofer magnet is far away from the monitor. Everything cleared
up.
It's funny though because I've had the speakers there before and had no
problems...
Thanks all...
Steve
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3917.11 | | Z::TENNY | Dave Tenny - DTN 291-8013 | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:42 | 22 |
| I've had (and still have) a similiar problem with my monitor.
I'm pretty sure the screen discoloration (corners especially,
but all greys are rendered somewhat green) began the day
I put a pair of tiny speakers on top of the monitor.
The whole effect may even have been compounded by my big
Cerwin-Vega speakers which were 12-18 inches away from system
for the duration of several years.
So, maybe degaussing will fix the monitor. It never bothered
me so much, since you usually only notice the colors are bad
if you compare it to a "correct" monitor.
Now I have a question. I have a "Tape Head Demagnetizer Thingy".
Is this Thingy working on the same principal as deguassers?
Could I use it on my monitor to correct the problem?
It's a strange plastic looking rod which hums in your hand
as you place it and slowly remove it from tape heads. Courtesy
of Radio Shack.
Betcha can tell I don't know much about it :-)
Dave
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3917.12 | Monitor interference? | HPSCAD::DMCARR | Asleep at the mouse | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:44 | 24 |
| Speaking of monitors... Could having an external floppy drive too close to
the monitor cause read/write (mostly write) errors? Here's the situation.
I've got an A500/C=2002 with my external AIRDrive sitting to the right
of the monitor. This is a brand new drive. My original AIRDrive, purchased
in Nov 89 started exhibiting write errors as well on brand new Sonys so
I returned it to Omnitek under warranty. AIR confirmed that there was
something wrong with the drive & replaced it with a brand new one. The
original "gronked" like crazy; the replacement's extremely quiet. Now
the replacement (< 1 month old) is starting in with write errors as well.
I've been testing using DiskSpeed. Format a virgin floppy, run DiskSpeed,
df1: gets write errors within a few minutes. Run DiskSpeed on the same
floppy in df0: - runs to completion. I've gone back to a stock out of the
box Commodore workbench just to eliminate anything s/w related that
might be in my startup-sequence. Ran DiskSpeed overnight, with the vanilla
WB1.3, with the drive moved away from the monitor. Ran to completion.
Tried it again early this morning using the same floppy and it failed
with write errors.
The difference: I turned the monitor off last night for the overnight run
since the vanilla WB doesn't have a screen blanker. Could the monitor be
causing the problem? This is driving me nuts.
-Dom
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3917.13 | | Z::TENNY | Dave Tenny - DTN 291-8013 | Wed Jul 11 1990 12:44 | 1 |
| Please pardon all the typos in .-1.
|
3917.14 | demagnetizing | READ::POMEROY | | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:04 | 15 |
| Yes, the demagnetizing rod works on the same principle. When something
becomes "gaussed", it has a net magnetic field pointing in a given
direction. To degauss something you put a strong magnetic field around
the object. Then you rapidly switch the polarity of the field back and
forth. Most Tape Demagnetizers employ a scheme where the field also
becomes gradually weaker, in your case, pulling the rod away makes it
weaken. A good degaussing coil is quite different from any tape
demagnetizer however, and I could almost guarantee that the Radio Shack
rod wouldn't fix your monitor. (Although you may want to see what
happens if you use the rod around the edges of the screen....Might
help, might hurt, I don't know)
bob
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3917.15 | monitor fields | READ::POMEROY | | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:14 | 23 |
| Someday read one of those warning labels that comes with floppies (or
the ones printed on the back of 5 1/4" disk sleeves). It undoubtedly
says to keep disks away from stray magnetic fields. You're monitor
probably utilizes some of the strongest magnetic fields in your room.
Generally fields aren't too strong at the sides or the back - they are
usually worst out the front, right at the screen being the worst of
all. You can easily destroy the data on a disk by holding it too close
to your screen. (I personally have corrupted a number of disks in this
manner) If there are any stray fields making their way into your drive,
it doesn't suprise me that it would screw up. Disks are pretty amazing,
it surprises me that they work at all now that I know how they work,
they are quite susceptible to outside forces. Even if your drive
experiences no problems, or you are one of those people who puts disks
on top of their monitor, a general rule is keep disks about a foot away
from monitors. This means disk drives too, although since they are
shielded, they can probably be a bit closer. I wouldn't put anything
closer than 6" away, just for safety's sake.
P.S. I wouldn't advise getting anymore AIRDrives, they don't sound too
well shielded if that is infact your problem.
bob
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3917.16 | heal thysef | MILKWY::JANZEN | Tom 2285421FXO/28 MicrowaveLogicQual | Wed Jul 11 1990 13:28 | 16 |
| re: -.1
I'm surprised. I would expect the strongest magnetic fields to be near
the flyback transformer of the monitor. This is often on the side and
back.
Once I had a small black and white TV with a rotated image. I had
accidentally magnetized the case, so I demagnetized it with a hand-held
adio tape eraser. Too bad Radio Shack no longer has degaussing coils,
which are big and round to show a similar field to the entire screen
at once rather than a small localized field that only works on part of
the screen at a time. (OK, I'm guessing; sue me.).
(no, don't).
;-)
Actually, the earth's magnetic field can also magnetize a color tube.
I also suggest going to a tv repair shop. Actually, I think my tube is
a little magnetized. Maybe I will look into it.
Tom
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3917.17 | Go stand under a magnetic crane | GOBAMA::WILSONTL | Tony, the HOSS TRUMPET | Wed Jul 11 1990 14:02 | 13 |
| The field from a monitor is almost all from the deflection coils and
flyback transformer (which are both toward the back), but the sides and
back are usually shielded whereas the front is not.
Re: the small tape eraser. As .-1 said, they have a very small field
and will probably leave your monitor in worse shape than it found it.
The Degausser you need must present a uniform field to the entire
display area and gradually get weaker (either internally or by pulling
it away slowly) uniformly.
Take a 40 pound magnet and rotate it sixty times per second while
pulling it away from your monitor. :^)
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