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On May 7, 11:41 pm, "Twayne" <nob...@devnull.spamcop.net> wrote:
> Wow! I don't know where you got your education, but ... you need more! > ... > So, if 3.23 reads 6, and 4.87 reads 9, that OK by your standards, > right? You're missing so much and so fickle in your knowledge that you > need to go back to school or get a life! If Twayne was educated, then he also knows why the 3.3 volts cannot read 6 volts and why 5 volts cannot read 9. Well there are people who learned how power supplies work and how to fix power supplies by designing them even 30 years ago. And then there are computer assemblers who don't even know how electricity works, never learned the basics, and do not know why those 6 and 9 volts cannot exist. How do we know Twayne has insufficient knowledge? He posts insults. All Twayne had to do is read ATX power supply specs to know why his numbers are impossible. Another problem with those who post insults. They also forget to learn basic facts before posting. Barkimmy asked: > How would one go about checking for a failing power supply? Do we want an answer from someone who fixed power suppliesy before the design even worked? Or one who knows without even reading power supply specs - who knows without first learning? |
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