pagan_prosperity skrev:
> Hi Ladies and Gents ,
>
> Thank you for talking your time reading this .
> I recently purchased an sds7 from south korea ,
> and today having put in the plug ( belgium ) and switching on the
> machine ,
> i saw the lights flash for a bit but then all went dead ,
> reanimating the machine doesn't work .
Woops - wrong voltage?!
> I am by far not experienced in the electric domain , but i did
> noticed , after having pulled out the fuse that the tube looks
> greyish dark on the inside walls and hollow in the centre .
Woops - definitely wrong voltage or similar (short circuit).
> I know nothing of this brain's past , perhaps it hasn't been used in
> a long time .
> I would greatly appreciate it if someone could help me out on this
> one ,
> been waiting so damn long for this brain and having it here out of
> use is torture !.
> Perhaps a new fuse ? , or new battery ?
> easy to find ? .
> Thank you very much
> Sander
Ignore the battery part at this point, getting it to just light up is
the main idea now.
Is it marked in anyway with voltages and similar. I'm not familiar with
Korean electricity but I guess it could've inherited a lot from Japan
and there they use 100-110 volts if I'm not mistaking. If you plug such
a device into a european 220-240 socket you're lucky that it had a fuse
to blow!
Let us know and do google "korean voltage" or similar. :D
--
electronically yours, jesper
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