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"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
I have a Sony ICF-2010, one of several classic Sony digital shortwave
radios. (The only thing "wrong" with it is that lacks stereo FM.) It uses two batteries -- three D cells for the main power, two AA cells for the clock, control, and memory. One of the contacts for the latter broke loose, and I had to glue it back in place (using Goop, rather than epoxy), inserting some plastic shims for support. When I reassembled the radio, the Power switch had no effect; it wouldn't turn on. The ICF-2010 is unusual in that the power and antenna connections are made through spring-loaded contacts to the main board, so that when you remove the back, you don't tear loose a bunch of fragile connections. I tried connecting them with jumpers, but still no luck. Then I remembered the Main Power switch on the left side and checked it. It was Off. Duh. Duh, duh, duh. -- "We already know the answers -- we just haven't asked the right questions." -- Edwin Land |
"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
What can I do for you?
I appreciate the kind offer, but I was referring to myself as Captain Stupid. |
"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
William Sommerwerck wrote:
Then I remembered the Main Power switch on the left side and checked it. It was Off. Duh. Duh, duh, duh. grin I scrapped half a dozen LCD monitors (a particular model) as "dead" before a friend pointed out a power switch (in addition to the front panel switch) on the back of the units... : |
"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
"D Yuniskis" wrote in message ... William Sommerwerck wrote: Then I remembered the Main Power switch on the left side and checked it. It was Off. Duh. Duh, duh, duh. grin I scrapped half a dozen LCD monitors (a particular model) as "dead" before a friend pointed out a power switch (in addition to the front panel switch) on the back of the units... : Yep, we've all been there ... |:-\ Arfa |
"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
My brother in law threw away maybe a hundred CDRs after finding he
could not write multiple sessions getting an error message that lead him to belive the disc was bad. All that was needed was to eject the disc and reload it so the burner could re-read the TOC after the session was written. He thought the disc was bad since it "couldn't read the TOC" :) (error msg) That doesn't strike as particularly dumb -- the software should have been able to reload the TOC. |
"Calling Captain Stupid. Come in, Captain Stupid."
William Sommerwerck wrote:
My brother in law threw away maybe a hundred CDRs after finding he could not write multiple sessions getting an error message that lead him to belive the disc was bad. All that was needed was to eject the disc and reload it so the burner could re-read the TOC after the session was written. He thought the disc was bad since it "couldn't read the TOC" :) (error msg) That doesn't strike as particularly dumb -- the software should have been able to reload the TOC. I don't know why, but a lot of CD burners are unable to read a freshly burned disc until they physically eject and reload it. Some software will try to force this automatically, but not all drives honor the eject/load commands. (Some, like slot-loading drives, physically can't.) |
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