Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rutgers!uwm.edu!cs.utexas.edu!samsung!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!stable.ecn.purdue.edu!yorkw From: yorkw@stable.ecn.purdue.edu (Willis F York) Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga Subject: Re: 1950 Monitor Problems Message-ID: Date: 30 Sep 90 03:58:27 GMT References: <2059@lpami.wimsey.bc.ca> Sender: news@ecn.purdue.edu (USENET news) Organization: Purdue University Engineering Computer Network Lines: 28 >>>I am having problems with my 1950 monitor. When I first turn it on and >>>it is cold, it wavers (vertical lines wavering horizontally). The dealer >>>demo at my local dealer also does this (it is worse than mine actually). >You aren't running them in close proximity to each other (or to other monitors) >are you Perry? In my experience, the most common cause of horizontal waver is >that another monitor is nearby, and the two are interfering with one another. I have Noticed that ANY electricial "device" can cause waves, I have a Small fan next to my machine and if it gets too close one can get nausua REAL fast, a Radio, Modem, or even Powersupply can cause the same problems. Could be interfreence from ya machine, (Do you have a 2000 with LOTS of cards) I hear that too many cards can cause interfreance. Try a metal plate on top of ya Machine, (Like I*M's have built in, their cases are metal, and cheap Clones use thinner metal and have similar Probs) C-ya. . Hay i actually ANSWERED a question for once... Wow. :wq -- yorkw@stable.ecn.purdue.edu Willis F York ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sig? I dont' need No Stinking This Space For Rent.... Sig! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~