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- The Apple II RoundTables especially want to welcome
- former America On-Line (AOL) members who have become
- A2 patrons as Apple II AOL access winds down there.
-
- A2 Libraries have the best, most complete collection
- of Apple files available anywhere, and you will find
- that our Bulletin Board is an informational gold
- mine.
-
- Mining the Bulletin Board
-
- Typical of new A2 members are Dave Taylor and Collin
- Douglas. As you can see from the abbreviations they
- use below, they've already figured out lots of
- terminology. For the uninitated, CAT stands for
- CATegory and TOP for TOPic; both are A2 Bulletin
- Board commands. Here's what they recently had to say.
-
- Dave Taylor: Hi All! I finally made it back here. :)
- Nice to see all the welcomes -- I am starting to feel
- more at home on GEnie. Trying now to sort out CAT and
- TOP to work my way through the messages. I'm just so
- used to ADV, Read New, AHW, etc. Now I've got to
- learn what CAT is where, and what TOP I want to read.
- As you can see, though, I learned my way back here!
-
- Collin Douglas: Thanks everyone for the warm welcome.
- My transition from AOL was probably aided by the fact
- that I've long used text-based BBSs (local and L.D.)
- so GEnie wasn't really a new experience. I do have
- Copilot and am impressed.
-
- Getting Help
-
- When an A2 member needs help with something, the
- Bulletin Board discussion usually proceeds in a
- predictable manner. A member posts a message about a
- problem and that problem is narrowed down and details
- are added, if necessary. Then, possible solutions are
- offered from other A2 members and staff. The member
- usually gets enough answers to solve the problem.
-
- Recently, Dave Huggins received help from an A2 staff
- member on how to fix his Apple IIc monitor.
-
- Dave Huggins: I've a IIc color composite monitor that
- apparently worked fine before shipping to me, but now
- warms up for 5-10 seconds, then creates a major short
- which trips a breaker. I'm not crazy enough to poke
- DEEPLY in a CRT, but I can do minor work safely with
- the case apart. Any guess about an "easy" fix --
- something that might create this symptom? (My TV
- repairman is my next call.)
-
- Harold Hislop (A2's resident solder slinger) replied:
- Let me guess... this monitor was in storage for quite
- some time, and was then dragged out, tested, and
- shipped to you. From what you're describing, I'd bet
- on one or more defective (very leaky) electrolytic
- capacitors in the power supply. You could probably
- track these down fairly simply...
-
- 1) Remove the case, but leave the case on
- 2) Operate the monitor till the breaker blows
- 3) Quickly pop open the case and place 1 finger on
- the top of each electrolytic capacitor in the
- power supply (actually all eletrolytics)
-
- Harold continued: Any that you find to be warm or hot
- should be replaced. (The real way to track these down
- is by removal and testing, but that's a pain, and the
- above procedure will usually find all the defective
- ones anyway. :)
-
- Dave Huggins responded: And just when you appear to
- return to human form, you pull one of these
- cross-country mind reading things. :) That is
- _exactly_ the history of this monitor. Okay, I'll
- sneak a peak and see if I can spot the power supply.
- I don't mind working with them, it's the CRT stuff I
- avoid.
-
- Thanks to Harold, Dave's monitor was working properly
- soon thereafter.
-
- Getting Live Assistance
-
- Don't forget to stop by the A2 Real-Time Conference
- area. You'll find quick assistance and friendly
- conversations most every evening there. And the
- Library contains archives of back messages from the
- Bulletin Board and lots of "How To" files for
- software work-arounds and hardware fixes.
-
- Just remember this: If you use an Apple II computer,
- the A2 RoundTable is the place to come for help as
- well as fun. Happy holidays!
-