I'm all for repairing stuff (or atleast making a more informed decision as far as if it's worth repairing) rather than default to replace everything instead - it's just not good from a waste point of view if nothing else - that said I wouldn't expect the OEM to continue any warranty it has (on the hardware) after an "unauthorized" repair
Lance Rossman of YouTube fame has finally won his crusade in getting Right to Repair past the New York legislature. Now it just awaits the governor signing it. Congratulations Lance as your perseverance has paid off!
Roman Hottgenroth is surrounded by lamps, dishwashers and vacuum cleaners. Computers, smartphones and TV receivers are piled high on tin shelves behind him. A group of washing machines rattles loudly in test mode, only somewhat drowned out by the bass thumping from a hi-fi system an employee is...
It'll be good practice at least, I did a bunch of practice boards the last few weeks but that's a bit different than actual repair. It's pretty obvious what's going on with those, so it's not very hard to trace the leads, and they aren't designed with faults so
Site is peaking on traffic for the recipes - Sundays are always the big days and we are 200 plus unique visitors an hour right now and it will be like that probably be around 3000 total on the site all day maybe more if Google desires it LOL
Anyway I have a power bench that I don't actually know how to use, but I'm assuming I can take the battery out and power it directly from that to see if any of them turn on.
If you had kids like me that grew up in that era you could just go to your closet and fish out one of the cords from the cord bag. I bet I have everyone of those cord connectors plus some