Toshiba TV29C90 problem; Image fades to black...

These joggled pins would probably have worked if the slots in the
ceramic bases were a mm thinner so the metal forks could not twist/splay
along their length. So an in-situ workaround would probably be formed
metal forks pushed into the p2,5,7 slots to close up the freedom to move
 
On Monday, October 9, 2000 7:12:03 PM UTC-5, bvo...@my-deja.com wrote:
My son's 1988 Jetta 1.8L just quit. Seems the injectors all fire
continuously flooding the engine. It appears the output device to
the injector (pin 12) is shorted. Pulling off the injector rail connector
stops the flow of fuel so not a stuck injector. All plugs wet.

Has anyone any help/advice to give in repairing the output
transistor/Mosfet in these ECU's? Or links to other help sites. Or
other Newsgroups to post to?

Bill Vorbau
bvorbau@hotmail.com


Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/
Before you buy.

hola buen dia,, si mira por lo que entiendo tus inyectores estan umedos, y tienes temos de tener un insendio ,, si te voy a decir que los inyectores ya no sirven son sellados y soportan una precion de conbustible al no poder soportar la precion se fugan ,, remplazo total de cada inyector en ese estado o con esos sognos ,, no hay ningun problema con tu bomba ni con tu regulador de gas,, saludos y suerte
 
Good that you fixed it, you hit the right combination of ingenuity and luck. Part of that luck I think is in the fact that it is an older vehicle. Newer ones probably have proprietary processors with embedded code which are likely made of unobtainium.

For future reference, most fuel injection systems are made specifically not to fire the injectors unless there are crank (or cam) pulses. The reason is to prevent what happened to you.

So you got a free clutch and a $3 engine flush, now would be a time to Slick* it and get another million miles out of it.

*Slick - a slanng term for using Slick 50 oil trwatment which is a PTFE resin. Used to be super expensive until the patent ran out. There are some similar to it - at varying prices.
 
El viernes, 4 de septiembre de 1998 04:00:00 UTC-3, Greg Allen escribió:
> This is a Bi-Amp from a Technics mini-system from about 1990/91. After 15 minutes of use, at moderate volume levels the bass side amplifier cuts out on both channels with a loud click (heard on the speakers). Power off, wait a few seconds, power on fixes it. No visible signs of fault - dust etc. Any clues, or suggestions for repair (London UK).cheers,Greg Allen greg.allen@dial.pipex.com

Greg, you have a state of the art piece of equipment. It seems that maybe something related to temperature is bodering after a few minutes. review this and change the ventilation device is cheap and easy. I have one at home and one day decided to connect it to a pair of B&W DM603 that allows bywiring and the result I got is incredible. The quality of sound is hard to believe and has nothng to do compared to the original speakers. I also tried the same speakers with things like YAMAHA M65 (power amp 170 W per channel), YAMAHA RVX 795, Luxman 1000 series and none of them are close to the sound of hte Panasonic / Technics.Also I have apair of MS speakers and tried with again excelent results. Good luck with your SC.
 
El sábado, 17 de agosto de 2013 13:37:47 UTC-4:30, eivan...@gmail.com escribió:
On Monday, October 9, 2000 7:12:03 PM UTC-5, bvo...@my-deja.com wrote:

My son's 1988 Jetta 1.8L just quit. Seems the injectors all fire

continuously flooding the engine. It appears the output device to

the injector (pin 12) is shorted. Pulling off the injector rail connector

stops the flow of fuel so not a stuck injector. All plugs wet.



Has anyone any help/advice to give in repairing the output

transistor/Mosfet in these ECU's? Or links to other help sites. Or

other Newsgroups to post to?



Bill Vorbau

bvorbau@hotmail.com





Sent via Deja.com http://www.deja.com/

Before you buy.



hola buen dia,, si mira por lo que entiendo tus inyectores estan umedos, y tienes temos de tener un insendio ,, si te voy a decir que los inyectores ya no sirven son sellados y soportan una precion de conbustible al no poder soportar la precion se fugan ,, remplazo total de cada inyector en ese estado o con esos sognos ,, no hay ningun problema con tu bomba ni con tu regulador de gas,, saludos y suerte

Espero que hayas notado que el post original fue publicado en el ańo 2000, es decir, hace exactamente 13 ańos. Es capaz que el carro ya ni exista!

I hope you noticed that the original post was published in 2000, thirteen years ago. I bet that car doesn´t even exist today!
 
On Wednesday, April 1, 1998 4:00:00 AM UTC-4, Lorenzo Bailey wrote:
Does anyone have the schematics for the TELCOM 5503-VIP cable box?
Also does any one know who is selling them for a guide price. The
box was made by general electric , I think.

I know this reply is 15 years late, however...I have possession of a TOCOM 5503-VIP. Are you still in need of one - it includes the instruction manual too. I will post to eBay, if you are interested.

Thanks and hope to hear from you soon.

From the future,
Brandon J.
 
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.
So when it was slower, it was my fault.
 
On 08/28/2013 11:32 AM, micky wrote:
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.


So when it was slower, it was my fault.

Isn't Verizon FTTH?
 
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 11:39:18 -0700, dave <ricketzz@earthlink.net>
wrote:

On 08/28/2013 11:32 AM, micky wrote:
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.


So when it was slower, it was my fault.

Isn't Verizon FTTH?

I have Verizon DSL, and no fibers.
 
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 14:32:09 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com>
wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

Maybe.

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

After a mile of (really) crappy 24ga. wire, not so much.

I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.

What sort of stuff? Electronics?
 
First of all the problem wouldn't be the guage of the wire at all, it would be interconductor capacitance. You're not running an air conditioner, you are sending a radio signal.
 
Unless your system is timing out, speed should not be an issue for regular webpages. If the webradio is supplied separately by the ISP it's one thing but I assume you just mean it online, which require the downloading of a page no ? Maybe it's new on me, but I would think all of this uses the same frequencies, and webpages loaded a long time before there was streaming audio on the net.

No matter what I would repeat the test a whole bunch of times. First of all every time you disconnect the thing the modem has to reacquire the signal, and who knows what happens then in the way of what error correction might be applied.

Also note that DSL, which is usually ASDL, is not all that fast in the first place. Uverse might be different but if it has to come through a phone line it has to come through a phone line, period.
 
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 20:46:06 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 14:32:09 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

Maybe.

No maybe. Do you think I can't read a number off the screen?

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

After a mile of (really) crappy 24ga. wire, not so much.

Yes, much. And there's more to the story.

I had bought special THIN phone wire with modular ends, so it would go
through a narrow space. After I installed that, I could still listen
to webradio but I couldn't download webpages. So I went back to the
wire I had been using (typical wire, not especially thin, from the
wall to the phone, with modular ends.) and everything worked again.

So then I though, maybe even this wire is too thin, and I changed to
the round white wire with 4 wires inside, thicker, each wire is
stiffer. It didnt' have modular plugs so I had to put a modular wall
jack on each end, and plug a short modular cord in each end, and when
connected, that's when the download speed tripled.



I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.

What sort of stuff? Electronics?
 
On 08/29/2013 12:06 AM, micky wrote:
On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 20:46:06 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 14:32:09 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

Maybe.

No maybe. Do you think I can't read a number off the screen?

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

After a mile of (really) crappy 24ga. wire, not so much.

Yes, much. And there's more to the story.

I had bought special THIN phone wire with modular ends, so it would go
through a narrow space. After I installed that, I could still listen
to webradio but I couldn't download webpages. So I went back to the
wire I had been using (typical wire, not especially thin, from the
wall to the phone, with modular ends.) and everything worked again.

So then I though, maybe even this wire is too thin, and I changed to
the round white wire with 4 wires inside, thicker, each wire is
stiffer. It didnt' have modular plugs so I had to put a modular wall
jack on each end, and plug a short modular cord in each end, and when
connected, that's when the download speed tripled.



I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.

What sort of stuff? Electronics?


A lot of those drugstore phone wires only have red and green.
 
En el artículo <s3gs19pq8qetdjl37qtmd18u3scqjs8o24@4ax.com>, micky
<NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> escribió:

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

That's entirely possible. You changed untwisted wire for twisted pair
wire. Twisted pair cancels out interference, so I can well believe you
saw an increase in your DSL sync speed.

--
(\_/)
(='.'=)
(")_(")
 
In sci.electronics.repair krw@attt.bizz wrote:
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 14:54:31 +0100, Mike Tomlinson
mike@jasper.org.uk> wrote:

En el artículo <s3gs19pq8qetdjl37qtmd18u3scqjs8o24@4ax.com>, micky
NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> escribió:

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

That's entirely possible. You changed untwisted wire for twisted pair
wire. Twisted pair cancels out interference, so I can well believe you
saw an increase in your DSL sync speed.

Nope. After a mile of crappy phone company, ten feet of more crap
isn't going to matter.

Sure it is. Do you understand what twisted-pair is? And why it's
necessary?

The "mile of crappy phone company" wire is twisted pair for a reason.
I'd suggest you learn something about RF signal propagation, which is
what we're discussing for DSL.

Jerry
 
"I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing. "

Try in sci.electronics.design , at least they know what capacitance is. these people seem to think you are losing the signal resistively through the wire which is not true. What must be happening is thatt he conductors are too close together effectively forming a capacitor.

Run it by SED, they're just as cocky, but got more reason apparently.
 
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 03:06:58 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com>
wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 20:46:06 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 14:32:09 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Wed, 28 Aug 2013 13:52:20 -0400, krw@attt.bizz wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 23:23:04 -0400, micky <NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com
wrote:

On Tue, 27 Aug 2013 11:54:29 -0500, CRNG <noemail@atthisdomain.gov
wrote:


My data usage is about 8Gbytes/month total down/up. Just curious:
what download speed do you typically get from U-Verse?
--
Web based forums are like subscribing to 10 different newspapers
and having to visit 10 different news stands to pickup each one.
Email list-server groups and USENET are like having all of those
newspapers delivered to your door every morning.

I don't remember my speed, and I have Verizon, but I used to use some
pretty thin phone wire (the kind used to go from the wall to the
phone) to go from the the interface box 50 feet to the DSL modem.
When I swtiched to thicker, stiffer, round, white wire, my download
speed tripled and is now about what Verizon promised.

Not buying it. After a mile of 24ga wire, a few tens of feet of 26ga
isn't going to matter a whit. You had something else wrong that
replacing the wire solved (or it was a good placebo).

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

Maybe.

No maybe. Do you think I can't read a number off the screen?

I have no idea what you're reading or what else is going on. In
short, yes.

As to why it changed, transmission of computer data is more
complicated than analog sound or power to run a light bulb. I added
sci.electronics.repair and maybe we'll find someone there who knows
more than we do.

After a mile of (really) crappy 24ga. wire, not so much.

Yes, much. And there's more to the story.

No f'n way. Unless physics is different on your planet. What color
is your sky?

I had bought special THIN phone wire with modular ends, so it would go
through a narrow space. After I installed that, I could still listen
to webradio but I couldn't download webpages. So I went back to the
wire I had been using (typical wire, not especially thin, from the
wall to the phone, with modular ends.) and everything worked again.

You have something else wrong. A few tens of feet of wire isn't going
to do it.

So then I though, maybe even this wire is too thin, and I changed to
the round white wire with 4 wires inside, thicker, each wire is
stiffer. It didnt' have modular plugs so I had to put a modular wall
jack on each end, and plug a short modular cord in each end, and when
connected, that's when the download speed tripled.

You probably had noise on the line. Perhaps the ends were rectifying
a radio station, dunno, but it was *NOT* caused by thin wire.
I don't know one, but maybe there's an active newsgroup that
specializes in this sort of thing.

What sort of stuff? Electronics?

Disintrest in knowledge noted.
 
On Thu, 29 Aug 2013 14:54:31 +0100, Mike Tomlinson
<mike@jasper.org.uk> wrote:

En el artículo <s3gs19pq8qetdjl37qtmd18u3scqjs8o24@4ax.com>, micky
NONONOmisc07@bigfoot.com> escribió:

Well it was no placebo. I'd measured my speed a dozen times on a
website that does that before I changed the wire; and I measure it a
dozen times after I changed the wire, and it was consistent before and
consistent afterwards.

That's entirely possible. You changed untwisted wire for twisted pair
wire. Twisted pair cancels out interference, so I can well believe you
saw an increase in your DSL sync speed.

Nope. After a mile of crappy phone company, ten feet of more crap
isn't going to matter.
 

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