Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
ExecLine
- 15 Aug 2008 12:46
- 7128 of 11003
My Viper PC has a sticker on the back, which acts as a case seal. If it is broken, and it has to be to in order to gain access to the innards of the machine, then it advises that this will invalidate the Warranty. I guess yours is the same?
I think the reality is, that to go inside the case, you have to know what you are doing. If something were to go wrong, then it would be the customer's articulate skills, when describing what he did and how he did it to the dealer (ie. showng the level of his techical knowledge, practical skills and ability), which would be the actual determining factor concerning any potential claim under a warranty.
At some time in his PC using life, a user has to make a decision as to whether it is best to start learning 'the hard way' - and perhaps risking extra expense, in order to gain 'inside the PC case knowledge'.
Go on TP! Stuff the risk and the dangers! Risk losing some money and "open the box!"
:-)
There are plenty of helpful web sites out there, one being You Tube with its videos, which will advise on everything from what tools to get (eg, 'a grounding strap'), to how to go about doing the job in hand.
Go on! Go for it!
:-)
ThePublisher
- 16 Aug 2008 12:27
- 7130 of 11003
Thanks for the vote of confidence, Exec !!
CD's have mailed back that they have some Drive Caddies coming in and that they can fit one to each of my PC's.
The more I think of what things cost (less than a tenner for a Caddy) and what is most likely to fail on a PC (the disk or the power unit) I am surprised at why not more people are encouraged to mount their hard drives in caddies. Especially if Acronis is all that it is cracked up to be. And all the other disk cloning software like it.
Yes, lots of people put price before convenience, but when you think of the palaver you have to go through when (as it almost inevitably does) the hard drive fails it must be better to fit one that you can swop without opening up the PC.
Or maybe I am missing something.
TP
Kayak
- 16 Aug 2008 12:31
- 7131 of 11003
I've never had a drive fail. Fans are the most failure-prone component, I've probably replaced three of them. In fact many are only built to last a couple of years if you keep your PC on 24/7. Also the fan inside the power supply, which can be replaced with a bit more tinkering without having to replace the whole power supply.
ThePublisher
- 16 Aug 2008 12:42
- 7132 of 11003
A couple of weeks ago I asked if anyone had found a way of getting Acronis to turn off a PC after doing a backup.
Here is how to do it with Vista.
(Kayak. Sadly it was when the fan failed on my studio PC, and I tried to replace the power unit myself, that I managed to thrash my hard drive!)
TP
Spaceman
- 16 Aug 2008 19:35
- 7133 of 11003
Kayak, interesting that you havnt had a drive fail, I have had 2 fail in the last 3 weeks, one of them had run non stop in my NAS for 3 years so I am not complaining about that. I used the failure to replace all 4 disks in the NAS with new 500GB drives.
And then ...... one of the new drives failed after about 30 hours !
Stan
- 18 Aug 2008 09:12
- 7134 of 11003
We inherited a PC system with a bigger (then I use on my Mac) Monitor over the W/E.
Question is will the PC Monitor work with my Mac processor?
The monitor is a Gatway VX900. 18inch (measuring corner to corner). to many Ref. Nos. on the back to quote. I did notice that the lead from the PC monitor has a 15 holed pin coming out while my present Mac monitor lead comes straight out. My guess is it won't work but I don't know. Seem to think that this question has been answered on here but to many posts to go back on to find.
Spaceman
- 18 Aug 2008 09:17
- 7135 of 11003
Stan, not sure it looks as though the gateway monitor does not have an digital input.
I use a Dell 24" Screen as a second monitor with my iMac 24" but thats a digital connection and only needed a lead from the apple shop.
Stan
- 18 Aug 2008 10:58
- 7136 of 11003
Thanks S/M, do you think that if the gateway connection is not digital that I can get a non-digital lead one end and a digital the other end going into the Mac? or is that not possible? Maplins have just opened a store locally so I would go there 1st for convenience.
ED: The monitor is 8 years old, but hardly used.
maddoctor
- 26 Aug 2008 13:06
- 7138 of 11003
whats the story on SP3 for XP at the mo - my XP just tried to update it automatically and i cancelled it as some time ago i saw peeps were having problems
hilary
- 26 Aug 2008 13:08
- 7139 of 11003
Spaceman asked me to ask a silly question.
If I set my chart background to black, will it conserve energy and make the monitor live longer?
maddoctor
- 26 Aug 2008 13:31
- 7141 of 11003
Optimist , thanks for your comments
HARRYCAT
- 26 Aug 2008 13:51
- 7142 of 11003
Am also using SP3 on my laptop with no problems so far (Downloaded about a month ago). To be honest, I can't see any visible difference from the old to the new.
maddoctor
- 26 Aug 2008 13:55
- 7143 of 11003
Harrycat , thats what microsoft say on their website. I have only ever taken the critical updates and do not require all the other stuff which you get with SP3 so unless somebody tells me for good reasons i should take it , i will hold fire.
maddoctor
- 27 Aug 2008 11:07
- 7146 of 11003
re Windows SP3 - seems microsoft have categorised it as a "Critical Download" so every time i opened up my computer it downloaded and asked me to install. This i have now done - the download and installation went Ok but the programme blipped a bit on startup but seems to have settled down. The only difference i can see is the lengthy time now for Windows to fully start , bit of a pain.
also failing to let me into my mail server?