@@christophzett They did! and I find your content really well delivered and quite useful, nice to see your continuing to spread your knowledge great for someone like me wanting to learn the craft.!
Yes that is incredibly. I think I might go and purchase an CRT rejuvenation machine. Incidentally I used to own an Outrun by Sega 1986 upright cabinet exactly what you have. I loved it. PS: do more PCB game repairs. You are a natural. We all want to learn from you.
Nice job. You got a great result from that rejuvenation. Nice camera close up on the tube neck filaments, burning off those contaminants. And the sparking 900/E.
I have used the high voltage output of a black and white TV to burn the components in the CRT of a color TV since the 1980s but this is a temporary repair typically only lasting several months, thanks for the video.
I've had really good results with my rejuvenator. Did the first rejuve more then 5 years ago of a monitor which had lost all it's red color and still happy with it today. I have to say that this monitor is not running every day of course. I think it's always worth a shot.
I have a bk 467 i bought it to rejuvenate my street fighter 2 cab monitor, the tube was very dim, no amount of focus adjusting would sharpen it up this was even after a full chassis rebuilt my picture pots where nearly on max, also it used to take ages to show a picture, the tube has screen burn so it has many hours under its belt, i just did a gental clean and balance to begin with the guns and the difference was unbelievable, nice sharp picture and the tube shows a picture very quickly, i did that 3 years ago and the tube has had more hours put onto it and still looking good.
Hey Juan! This procedure is only meant to be applied if your tube has 0% of usable life left - so only do this if the tube is practically dead 💀 and would have to be replced anyhow if rejuvenation would be unsuccessful. So do the math: if a tube that has 0% life left would as a worst case further decline by 30% as you say… well it would still be at 0% 😅
Glad to see you are back Dok i thought we had lost you, your repair videos kept me sane throughout covid keep on truckin" them through!
Yes I am back! Thank you for finding my videos interesting. Really happy to hear I could help ypu keep your senses together! 😀
@@christophzett They did! and I find your content really well delivered and quite useful, nice to see your continuing to spread your knowledge great for someone like me wanting to learn the craft.!
Yes that is incredibly. I think I might go and purchase an CRT rejuvenation machine.
Incidentally I used to own an Outrun by Sega 1986 upright cabinet exactly what you have. I loved it.
PS: do more PCB game repairs. You are a natural. We all want to learn from you.
Thank you very much, sir! More pcb repairs are coming up, as you might know I'm just in the middle of a 4 video series for some Phoeix/Pleiades pcbs.
Nice to have you back. Always enjoy your videos and clear explanations 👍
Thank you very much! I‘m already thinking about the next vid. I guess I‘m really back into it.
Nice job. You got a great result from that rejuvenation. Nice camera close up on the tube neck filaments, burning off those contaminants. And the sparking 900/E.
I wasn't so sure at first but the Hantarex is really a good monitor. After capkit, new flyback and rejuvenation it is really like new!
I have used the high voltage output of a black and white TV to burn the components in the CRT of a color TV since the 1980s but this is a temporary repair typically only lasting several months, thanks for the video.
I've had really good results with my rejuvenator. Did the first rejuve more then 5 years ago of a monitor which had lost all it's red color and still happy with it today. I have to say that this monitor is not running every day of course. I think it's always worth a shot.
First time to see crt rejuvenation in action. Risky but end result was worth it. Well done.
Thanks! Actually did another one yesterday on a old multi game cabinet and again worked like a charm...
Glad to see you are back!
Thank you very much! I really appreciate positive comments like that. 😊
Glad to see you back!
Thank you!
I have a bk 467 i bought it to rejuvenate my street fighter 2 cab monitor, the tube was very dim, no amount of focus adjusting would sharpen it up this was even after a full chassis rebuilt my picture pots where nearly on max, also it used to take ages to show a picture, the tube has screen burn so it has many hours under its belt, i just did a gental clean and balance to begin with the guns and the difference was unbelievable, nice sharp picture and the tube shows a picture very quickly, i did that 3 years ago and the tube has had more hours put onto it and still looking good.
Super Video. Gerne mehr.
Wird gemacht!
Sweet song at the end! Is that a remix or an original?
How long will it last?
Nice video thnx for this share
I had a rejuvenating-device, a Müter BMR-2005.
On some Tubes it worked, on some not.
Mostly Sony and Philipstubes are immun to this.
Long term update? I've read the rejuvenation is temporary.
Grazie 👍
Thank you for watching!
Warum nicht mal ein paar Deutsche Videos über Arcade Reparaturen?
Wäre wirklich super 😊
Hmm, meinst du hier gäbe es genug Zuschauer auch in Deutschland?
By overheating you could cause failure and off gassing which could jeopardize your health this is the reason we stopped doing it .
Hey, who is the doctor here? ;-)
I don’t recommend this. If fixed hundreds of monitors, and RARELY does one need rejuvenated. Super rare.
I have had good results so far with the few rejuvenations I did - I think 4 or 5 ?!. But I could be on a streak of good luck of course ;-)
this procedure reduce 30 % life of CRT, don´t do it!!!!
Hey Juan! This procedure is only meant to be applied if your tube has 0% of usable life left - so only do this if the tube is practically dead 💀 and would have to be replced anyhow if rejuvenation would be unsuccessful.
So do the math: if a tube that has 0% life left would as a worst case further decline by 30% as you say… well it would still be at 0% 😅