Toshiba TV29C90 problem; Image fades to black...

On Wed, 31 Oct 2012 23:33:21 -0700 (PDT), jbly444@gmail.com put finger
to keyboard and composed:

My Names Jordan, Mine just crapped out, is there a way i could see it?
http://elektrotanya.com/sony_str-av23-av270x-av370x-av570x.pdf/download.html
http://elektrotanya.com/sony_str-av270x,av370x.pdf/download.html
http://sportsbil.com/sony/STR/STR-A/STR-AV270X_AV370X.pdf
http://www.google.com.au/search?q=%22STR-AV270X%22+filetype%3Apdf+OR+filetype%3Adoc+%22manual%22+OR+%22guide%22+OR+%22instructions%22

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
 
On 11/3/2012 1:03 AM, micky wrote:
On Fri, 2 Nov 2012 21:14:33 -0700 (PDT),
missingchild@brainchampagne.com wrote:

I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that their plan is to start removing copper and transition everyone over to fiber. Thus ensuring that in the event of a disaster nobody has phone service after a few hours. I asked about a [bigger backup battery for the FIOS phone] and was told that the charger they use isn't powerful enough for it.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or months
to charge the battery, however long it is between power failures.

I had a 2nd-hand UPS and the battery wore out, and I replaced it with
a bigger one and it worked fine. I just broke out the plastic ribs
that held the smaller one in place. Of course they didnt'
specifically say a bigger battery wouldn't work, but how would the guy
you talked to know? He only "knows" what they told him.

They call this progress.

By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper wire so you can never go back to it.

I called about something and she started pushing me, over and over,
to get FIOS. I said I couldn't afford it but she said it was cheaper.
I'm still on an introductory rate for DSL and FIOS would be more, not
less.
Well,

A FIOS backup battery, at least the one in my panel, is a 12 volt gel
cell rated at 7.2 amp hours, which provides 'UP TO' 8 hours of backup.
Remember, 2 hours is a subset of UP TO 8 hours. During this event, I
got about 9 hours out of the battery.

Anyway, I'm sure the charge could handle a bit bigger battery, say 10
AH, but to hook up a car battery to it would be asking a bit much of the
charger. On the other hand, when power is out those with some knowledge
can add in more battery to run the panel while power is out. I do
this, and I disconnect my external battery when I'm not at home, since
there is no reason to run the panel when it will go to the answering
system anyway.

Lastly, keep in mind that the backup is ONLY for phone, Video and
internet goes away when the AC power is lost, at least on my panel.

Regards,
Tim
Bristol Electronics
 
"Tim Schwartz" <tim@bristolnj.com> wrote in message
news:k799e9$5n5$1@dont-email.me...
On 11/3/2012 1:03 AM, micky wrote:
On Fri, 2 Nov 2012 21:14:33 -0700 (PDT),
missingchild@brainchampagne.com wrote:

I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that their plan is
to start removing copper and transition everyone over to fiber. Thus
ensuring that in the event of a disaster nobody has phone service after
a few hours. I asked about a [bigger backup battery for the FIOS phone]
and was told that the charger they use isn't powerful enough for it.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or months
to charge the battery, however long it is between power failures.

I had a 2nd-hand UPS and the battery wore out, and I replaced it with
a bigger one and it worked fine. I just broke out the plastic ribs
that held the smaller one in place. Of course they didnt'
specifically say a bigger battery wouldn't work, but how would the guy
you talked to know? He only "knows" what they told him.

They call this progress.

By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper wire so you
can never go back to it.

I called about something and she started pushing me, over and over,
to get FIOS. I said I couldn't afford it but she said it was cheaper.
I'm still on an introductory rate for DSL and FIOS would be more, not
less.


Well,

A FIOS backup battery, at least the one in my panel, is a 12 volt gel
cell rated at 7.2 amp hours, which provides 'UP TO' 8 hours of backup.
Remember, 2 hours is a subset of UP TO 8 hours. During this event, I got
about 9 hours out of the battery.

Anyway, I'm sure the charge could handle a bit bigger battery, say 10 AH,
but to hook up a car battery to it would be asking a bit much of the
charger. On the other hand, when power is out those with some knowledge
can add in more battery to run the panel while power is out. I do this,
and I disconnect my external battery when I'm not at home, since there is
no reason to run the panel when it will go to the answering system anyway.

Lastly, keep in mind that the backup is ONLY for phone, Video and internet
goes away when the AC power is lost, at least on my panel.

Regards,
Tim
Bristol Electronics
What about the rest of their network? Will it hold up for more than 8 hours?
 
Maybe things are different in differing locations, but I still have internet when the power fails as long as the router is connected to a UPS. The FIOS connection itself is powered by the battery, but the router (required for internet access) is not. Also, the internal controller will shut-off hte internet connection at about the 6 hour mark, reserving the remainder of the battery life for phone support only. Since many households now use FIOS or cable for phone, the emphasis is made to provide phone support for as long as possible.

As usual, YMMV

Dan
 
On Mon, 05 Nov 2012 16:00:56 -0500, Tim Schwartz <tim@bristolnj.com>
wrote:
Well,

A FIOS backup battery, at least the one in my panel, is a 12 volt gel
cell rated at 7.2 amp hours, which provides 'UP TO' 8 hours of backup.
Remember, 2 hours is a subset of UP TO 8 hours. During this event, I
got about 9 hours out of the battery.
Posted and mailed, if you don't mind. .

Even though you weren't on the phone for most of that time? Maybe
you talked for an hour and it still went dead after 9?
Anyway, I'm sure the charge could handle a bit bigger battery, say 10
AH, but to hook up a car battery to it would be asking a bit much of the
charger. On the other hand, when power is out those with some knowledge
can add in more battery to run the panel while power is out. I do
this, and I disconnect my external battery when I'm not at home, since
there is no reason to run the panel when it will go to the answering
system anyway.

Lastly, keep in mind that the backup is ONLY for phone, Video and
internet goes away when the AC power is lost, at least on my panel.
At first I didn't care about internet, because I don't have a laptop
yet, but I plan to get one. With DSL that I have now, that works
even when the power is out, right? (Assuming there is power at the
telephone company.)
Regards,
Tim
Bristol Electronics
 
On Mon, 5 Nov 2012 17:11:53 -0500, "tm" <No_one_home@white-house.gov>
wrote:

"Tim Schwartz" <tim@bristolnj.com> wrote in message
news:k799e9$5n5$1@dont-email.me...
On 11/3/2012 1:03 AM, micky wrote:
On Fri, 2 Nov 2012 21:14:33 -0700 (PDT),
missingchild@brainchampagne.com wrote:

I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that their plan is
to start removing copper and transition everyone over to fiber. Thus
ensuring that in the event of a disaster nobody has phone service after
a few hours. I asked about a [bigger backup battery for the FIOS phone]
and was told that the charger they use isn't powerful enough for it.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or months
to charge the battery, however long it is between power failures.

I had a 2nd-hand UPS and the battery wore out, and I replaced it with
a bigger one and it worked fine. I just broke out the plastic ribs
that held the smaller one in place. Of course they didnt'
specifically say a bigger battery wouldn't work, but how would the guy
you talked to know? He only "knows" what they told him.

They call this progress.

By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper wire so you
can never go back to it.

I called about something and she started pushing me, over and over,
to get FIOS. I said I couldn't afford it but she said it was cheaper.
I'm still on an introductory rate for DSL and FIOS would be more, not
less.


Well,

A FIOS backup battery, at least the one in my panel, is a 12 volt gel
cell rated at 7.2 amp hours, which provides 'UP TO' 8 hours of backup.
Remember, 2 hours is a subset of UP TO 8 hours. During this event, I got
about 9 hours out of the battery.

Anyway, I'm sure the charge could handle a bit bigger battery, say 10 AH,
but to hook up a car battery to it would be asking a bit much of the
charger. On the other hand, when power is out those with some knowledge
can add in more battery to run the panel while power is out. I do this,
and I disconnect my external battery when I'm not at home, since there is
no reason to run the panel when it will go to the answering system anyway.

Lastly, keep in mind that the backup is ONLY for phone, Video and internet
goes away when the AC power is lost, at least on my panel.

Regards,
Tim
Bristol Electronics


What about the rest of their network? Will it hold up for more than 8 hours?
Wouldn't that depend on where all the power outages are? Are there
amplifers or whatever between the central station and one's home, that
require power, and might not have any?

Are there back-up generators at Bell and Verizon telephone exchanges?

Wired phones run on batteries at the central station with generators
to keep the batteries charged, but what about FIOS phone and Fios
Internet?
 
On 11/6/2012 12:01 PM, micky wrote:
On Mon, 5 Nov 2012 17:11:53 -0500, "tm" <No_one_home@white-house.gov
wrote:


"Tim Schwartz" <tim@bristolnj.com> wrote in message
news:k799e9$5n5$1@dont-email.me...
On 11/3/2012 1:03 AM, micky wrote:
On Fri, 2 Nov 2012 21:14:33 -0700 (PDT),
missingchild@brainchampagne.com wrote:

I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that their plan is
to start removing copper and transition everyone over to fiber. Thus
ensuring that in the event of a disaster nobody has phone service after
a few hours. I asked about a [bigger backup battery for the FIOS phone]
and was told that the charger they use isn't powerful enough for it.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or months
to charge the battery, however long it is between power failures.

I had a 2nd-hand UPS and the battery wore out, and I replaced it with
a bigger one and it worked fine. I just broke out the plastic ribs
that held the smaller one in place. Of course they didnt'
specifically say a bigger battery wouldn't work, but how would the guy
you talked to know? He only "knows" what they told him.

They call this progress.

By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper wire so you
can never go back to it.

I called about something and she started pushing me, over and over,
to get FIOS. I said I couldn't afford it but she said it was cheaper.
I'm still on an introductory rate for DSL and FIOS would be more, not
less.


Well,

A FIOS backup battery, at least the one in my panel, is a 12 volt gel
cell rated at 7.2 amp hours, which provides 'UP TO' 8 hours of backup.
Remember, 2 hours is a subset of UP TO 8 hours. During this event, I got
about 9 hours out of the battery.

Anyway, I'm sure the charge could handle a bit bigger battery, say 10 AH,
but to hook up a car battery to it would be asking a bit much of the
charger. On the other hand, when power is out those with some knowledge
can add in more battery to run the panel while power is out. I do this,
and I disconnect my external battery when I'm not at home, since there is
no reason to run the panel when it will go to the answering system anyway.

Lastly, keep in mind that the backup is ONLY for phone, Video and internet
goes away when the AC power is lost, at least on my panel.

Regards,
Tim
Bristol Electronics


What about the rest of their network? Will it hold up for more than 8 hours?

Wouldn't that depend on where all the power outages are? Are there
amplifers or whatever between the central station and one's home, that
require power, and might not have any?

Are there back-up generators at Bell and Verizon telephone exchanges?

Wired phones run on batteries at the central station with generators
to keep the batteries charged, but what about FIOS phone and Fios
Internet?

You are talking about days of old. Less than 40% of the population has
wired phones and phone companies see the handwriting on the wall. Many
such as Verizon sold off a bunch of those systems (Verizon sold off 13
states) to companies that will run what remains on a shoestring budget.
Stuff that they do retain will never again see the TLC of old.
 
On Tue, 06 Nov 2012 12:39:13 -0500, George <george@nospam.invalid>
wrote:

Wired phones run on batteries at the central station with generators
to keep the batteries charged, but what about FIOS phone and Fios
Internet?

You are talking about days of old. Less than 40% of the population has
wired phones and phone companies see the handwriting on the wall. Many
such as Verizon sold off a bunch of those systems (Verizon sold off 13
states) to companies that will run what remains on a shoestring budget.
Stuff that they do retain will never again see the TLC of old.
But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators? Are there amps or something on phone poles
between the telephone exchange and my house that depend on a source of
power that's neither the exchange or my house?
 
micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:

On Tue, 06 Nov 2012 12:39:13 -0500, George <george@nospam.invalid
wrote:


Wired phones run on batteries at the central station with generators
to keep the batteries charged, but what about FIOS phone and Fios
Internet?

You are talking about days of old. Less than 40% of the population has
wired phones and phone companies see the handwriting on the wall. Many
such as Verizon sold off a bunch of those systems (Verizon sold off 13
states) to companies that will run what remains on a shoestring budget.
Stuff that they do retain will never again see the TLC of old.

But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators? Are there amps or something on phone poles
between the telephone exchange and my house that depend on a source of
power that's neither the exchange or my house?
Took a tour of a switching office once.
They have power, then backup generators, then big racks of backup
batteries.

The old copper system powered the phone from the switching office.
Your lights could be out but you could still use the phone.

With FIOS you have a few hours of battery power then you're dead.
In this last storm, my battery backup failed and had to be replaced
before I could use FIOS at all.

--
Dan Espen
 
On 11/6/2012 2:09 PM, Dan Espen wrote:
micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:

On Tue, 06 Nov 2012 12:39:13 -0500, George <george@nospam.invalid
wrote:


Wired phones run on batteries at the central station with generators
to keep the batteries charged, but what about FIOS phone and Fios
Internet?

You are talking about days of old. Less than 40% of the population has
wired phones and phone companies see the handwriting on the wall. Many
such as Verizon sold off a bunch of those systems (Verizon sold off 13
states) to companies that will run what remains on a shoestring budget.
Stuff that they do retain will never again see the TLC of old.

But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators? Are there amps or something on phone poles
between the telephone exchange and my house that depend on a source of
power that's neither the exchange or my house?

Took a tour of a switching office once.
They have power, then backup generators, then big racks of backup
batteries.

Thats how things used to be when everyone had a wired phone. Something
like 60% of the population doesn't anymore. Providers are running away
from and spending as little as possible on the sort of infrastructure
you described.

The old copper system powered the phone from the switching office.
Your lights could be out but you could still use the phone.

With FIOS you have a few hours of battery power then you're dead.
In this last storm, my battery backup failed and had to be replaced
before I could use FIOS at all.
 
I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that
their plan is to start removing copper and transition everyone
over to fiber.
That's their wish, but they can not force. The copper is
regulated, the fiber is not. The Suits have been making noises
about "maximizing our investment" which means "coerce people
to giving up copper..." For example, I cannot upgrade my DSL
because FIO$ is available here.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or
months to charge the battery, however long it is between power
failures.
Bingo, why do you care if it takes a week to fully recharge a
75AH deep cycle battery....?

By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper
wire so you can never go back to it.
Unless you can make good threats...their legal basis is iffy.

I called about something and she started pushing me, over and
over, to get FIOS. I said I couldn't afford it but she said it
was cheaper.
Bingo. And FIO$ keeps going up in cost.
--
A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com
& no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX
Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433
is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
 
"tm" <No_one_home@white-house.gov> writes:


What about the rest of their network? Will it hold up for more than 8 hours?
There is nothing active between the FIOS CO and your ONT.
If your ONT has power, there's no reason for it to go down.



--
A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com
& no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX
Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433
is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
 
micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:


But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators?
They better; a CO is required to have backup power and does.

--
A host is a host from coast to coast.................wb8foz@nrk.com
& no one will talk to a host that's close........[v].(301) 56-LINUX
Unless the host (that isn't close).........................pob 1433
is busy, hung or dead....................................20915-1433
 
David Lesher wrote:
I spoke to someone from Verizon this morning who said that
their plan is to start removing copper and transition everyone
over to fiber.

That's their wish, but they can not force. The copper is
regulated, the fiber is not. The Suits have been making noises
about "maximizing our investment" which means "coerce people
to giving up copper..." For example, I cannot upgrade my DSL
because FIO$ is available here.

How can the charger not be powerful enough. It has weeks or
months to charge the battery, however long it is between power
failures.

Bingo, why do you care if it takes a week to fully recharge a
75AH deep cycle battery....?

With the internal charger? It would look like a bad battery and shut
down, if the charger design is any good.



By the way, when they install fios they take away the copper
wire so you can never go back to it.

Unless you can make good threats...their legal basis is iffy.

How do you propose a way to force them to keep copper when a lot of
'copper' circuits are only metallic for the last mile or less? IOW,
it's already mostly a fiber backbone. That last mile has the highest
maintenance costs, and will be replaced no matter what you want. The
line to my house has had an intermittent hum problem that they can't
find. When it shows up I call on a VOIP number to report it. The line
clears up about three to five minutes before they arrive, or it starts
working right after they verify that there is a problem.
 
David Lesher wrote:
micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:

But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators?

They better; a CO is required to have backup power and does.

I haven't seen a real Central Office in decades. Just small
switching centers that are being replaced with packet switching
hardware. Most are the size of a one car garage, to have room to store
spare boards & equipment.
 
On 11/06/2012 11:04 PM, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
David Lesher wrote:

micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:

But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators?

They better; a CO is required to have backup power and does.


I haven't seen a real Central Office in decades. Just small
switching centers that are being replaced with packet switching
hardware. Most are the size of a one car garage, to have room to store
spare boards & equipment.
I remember seeing the Central Office in Ft. Worth, with a lot of big
batteries (they said some of the batteries were from old submarines).
The batteries were supposed to be able to power everything for at least
24 hours, with generators for longer outages.

That was about 31 years ago.

BTW, they had more operators come to work during snowstorms and after
football games.

--
48 days until the winter celebration (Tue Dec 25, 2012 12:00:00 AM).

Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.us

"Holy Scripture: A book sent down from heaven.... Holy Scriptures
contain all that a Christian should know and believe, provided he adds
to it a million or so commentaries. [Voltaire]
 
Mark Lloyd wrote:
On 11/06/2012 11:04 PM, Michael A. Terrell wrote:

David Lesher wrote:

micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> writes:

But what about FIOS. If there is a power failure at the exchange, do
they all have generators?

They better; a CO is required to have backup power and does.


I haven't seen a real Central Office in decades. Just small
switching centers that are being replaced with packet switching
hardware. Most are the size of a one car garage, to have room to store
spare boards & equipment.


I remember seeing the Central Office in Ft. Worth, with a lot of big
batteries (they said some of the batteries were from old submarines).
The batteries were supposed to be able to power everything for at least
24 hours, with generators for longer outages.

That was about 31 years ago.

BTW, they had more operators come to work during snowstorms and after
football games.

Operators, 3i years ago? they must have still been a Strowager type
Central office if they were that out of date. My home town had it's
first generation ESS Central Office before that. It replaced some
1920's design junk. The batteries were designed for the application. I
doubt submarine batteries would last long in that application since C.O.
batteries are on float charge 99.9% of the time.
 
On 11-07-2012 17:34, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Operators, 3i years ago? they must have still been a Strowager type
Central office if they were that out of date. My home town had it's
first generation ESS Central Office before that. It replaced some
I operated a pull-out-out-the-cord-and-plug-it-in switchboard for a few
days in 1973.

On Navy ships in the late 1970s, we still had click-click-click rotating
stepper switches.

--
Wes Groleau

I won't burn your Koran because I don't want you to burn my Bible;
but if you burn my Bible, no one's going to die.
— Robert Rhee
 
Wes Groleau wrote:
On 11-07-2012 17:34, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Operators, 3i years ago? they must have still been a Strowger type
Central office if they were that out of date. My home town had it's
first generation ESS Central Office before that. It replaced some

I operated a pull-out-out-the-cord-and-plug-it-in switchboard for a few
days in 1973.

Not many were left by then.


On Navy ships in the late 1970s, we still had click-click-click rotating
stepper switches.

Strowger stepper.


<http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR1YMkG7qiygjslORZGAFHqGQzJE-4-IEcMxudCY1Nftoo6TKolEKcXApy8>
 
On 11-07-2012 20:37, Michael A. Terrell wrote:
Wes Groleau wrote:
I operated a pull-out-out-the-cord-and-plug-it-in switchboard for a few
days in 1973.

Not many were left by then.
Like <http://www.telephonetribute.com/images/fig3-2.gif>
but much smaller. Just served one building.

On Navy ships in the late 1970s, we still had click-click-click rotating
stepper switches.

Strowger stepper.

http://t0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR1YMkG7qiygjslORZGAFHqGQzJE-4-IEcMxudCY1Nftoo6TKolEKcXApy8
Well, same principle, I think, though it doesn't look the same. I
wasn't trained on it, but by watching it work, I think I figured it out.
I think we had two-digit numbers. Pick up a phone and a one-axis rotor
would step to the correct line of ten. Another would then select the
first rotor out of ten. Then one or two would connect that phone to
one of ten or a hundred lines to the other side, and the process in
reverse would select the right destination phone.

--
Wes Groleau

Trying to be happy is like trying to build a machine for which
the only specification is that it should run noiselessly.
— unknown
 

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