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I hate repairing things for 'experts' who have already tried to fix it. He might give your money back with a smile if you promise never to return.
I think that you have underestimated the value of his expertise. Several times in this thread it was suggested that you change the capacitors, but you took the monitor to a professional instead. Now you don't want to pay him.
Is your problem that he said six parts and only changed two? Do you understand the breakdown of the repair cost? I would break it down $50 diagnosis, $2 parts, $15 shop overhead, $10 repair labor. So he really spent only $1 on parts so you've been ripped off?
I'm sorry if we disagree so strongly.
[e]When you first came here, you couldn't identify the transformer, if I recall.[\e]
I still can't find the post where you said he itemized the five parts for $36. Your posts seem to all say he said he needed 5 parts. Did he buy all 5 and install the capacitors firrst and it worked? Is he stuck with 2 diodes and an IC?Boy for having 2,200 posts you sure do have a hard time following a thread!
I still can't find the post where you said he itemized the five parts for $36. Your posts seem to all say he said he needed 5 parts. Did he buy all 5 and install the capacitors firrst and it worked? Is he stuck with 2 diodes and an IC?
If they were itemized on the invoice and weren't given to you, then you were ripped off. Suddenly you have provided information that supports your outrage.
We no longer disagree, and now I should be sorry that I did not read your mind? Or not.
where i work, we are required to return the bad parts in a bag on COD repairs. we also don't inflate the bill. inflating the bill is bad business. we also have estimate fees. if we open it up and find out what's bad and you decide not to have it fixed, it's $35. we have 3 labor rates for repairs, $50, $80, and $120 depending on how long the repair takes. we call the customer with an estimate before ordering parts. we don't quote estimates on lightning hits or water damage. everything is in "black and white" and we have very very few irate customers and lots of happy ones. i've been in electronics for over 35 years, worked for a lot of different companies. i've even quit a few when i saw something not right with their business practices. it doesn't pay in the long run to fudge a repair bill. it takes hard work to get a good reputation. it only takes one mistake to lose it.
btw.... aren't those caps a little oversized? it's not generally a bad thing to use a bit higher value and voltage of cap, but the base of one of them seems to be right up against two diode leads. if the shrink wrap on the cap gets pinched it could short against one of the diode leads.....