[Coco] CM-8 monitor
Dave Philipsen
dave at davebiz.com
Tue Aug 4 15:33:02 EDT 2015
Agreed. I have fixed a number of monitors over the years and, as Art
says, many times it's a bad capacitor. The environment inside an
enclosure with a hot CRT is not good for capacitors. And, generally but
not always, you can tell when the cap is swollen or looks like it has a
leak.
BTW, larger capacitors like electrolytics or tantalums have a polarity
marked on the outside. Just make sure you match them up correctly.
Electrolytics have a nasty way of popping like firecrackers if they get
hooked up backwards.
Dave
On , Arthur Flexser wrote:
> There's always the strategy of opening it up and checking for
> capacitors
> that appear swollen, no schematic required. Electrolytic capacitors
> that
> have died of old age is a very common cause of failure in old monitors.
>
> Be aware when replacing these that some capacitors have a polarity,
> contrary to what many of us learned in school. (I forget why this is.)
>
> Art
>
> On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 2:49 PM, Joel Ewy <jcewy at swbell.net> wrote:
>
>> On 08/04/2015 01:14 PM, George Ramsower wrote:
>>
>>> Is there someone that can repair a CM-8 monitor?
>>> I have two and they both died within about two months, on two
>>> different
>>> cocos. Darnit!!
>>> So, now I'm stuck with a TV and it is horrible.
>>> I did get a converter for RGB/VGA board but I haven't had a chance
>>> to
>>> play with it....yet.
>>>
>>> However, I do need to get a CM-8 working so I can see what I'm
>>> doing.
>>>
>>> George R.
>>>
>>>
>>> I've got a couple of them as well, and want to keep them working as
>>> long
>> as possible. Is there a schematic in the archives?
>>
>> JCE
>>
>>
>> --
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>>
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