6+ yrs. of monitor repair...

(1/6) > >>

Belbtech:
See if this comes through this time...it's all the repairs I've done to monitors in the last six years...

God bless,
Mike><>

Ken Layton:
That one came through. Boy you sure fixed a lot of Kortek KT-1703N's.

Belbtech:
Glad to see it is downloadable, yes there are quite few KT-1703N's...300+...

I ought to mention that the column labeled "Problem" are what ever the floor techs considered the problem to be and noted on the repair tag, so sometimes the "solution" doesn't seem to have anything to do with the problem & they don't!!!  You need to remember that the first "law" of troubleshooting is to verify that there is a problem...thus the reason you find quite a few NPFs (No Problem Found) & CNDs (Could Not Duplicate) in the "Solution" column.

Hope some of the information is of use to someone...

God bless,
Mike><>

TZtech:
Hello Mike

Great Info - Thanks for posting. Is this for one property and if so what the ratio of ceronix vs kortek etc on your floor ?
My opinion is that Ceronix are the best gaming monitors - Looking for some hard facts to prove me right/wrong.

Regards
Ian

Belbtech:
Hi Ian,

You're welcome, hope it will be of use to you...

Yes, it is from one property.  I'd say that we have close to 65% Kortek (that's counting Kortek LCDs & a few 19" in I-Games)...most of our Ceronix monitors are bartops, Konami games, Atronic games, a few older Aristocrat games, & Ceronix LCDs used in Atronic Emotion games.  Of course we have Kristel LCDs in the Wms. Bluebird games, and Tovis Monitors used in I-Games, some other oddball monitors in the newer games on the floor, most of the new games are not supported at all!

The topic in this repair section "Ceronix Monitors (Older...1490 & 1492)" were from a casino in Las Vegas from 1993 to 1998... that casino was in the process of switching all the monitors to Ceronix, they had switched out all Electrohome Monitors & most RGB Monitors (1401s & 1401As), most everything from the mid-90s came in with Ceronix Monitors in them.

I have had good results when working on Ceronix monitors...the best thing about Ceronix is the fact that the company doesn't have any secrets, they want you to know how to repair their monitors!!!  All manuals are available on their web site (no charge), plus information on parts, I'm not sure if they still sell components to the public, but that was the least expensive place to buy components...diodes for $0.01 each, capacitors for pennys, etc...

Hope that answers your question...

God bless,
Mike><>

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page