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Did not see any such ‘clips’ that prevented the insides being removed from the case.
So this is a 4.5 cubic foot mini-refrigerator. I suppose the door was damaged in moving the refrigerator - maybe dropped because it has a weight of 58 pounds.
That might work on the TOP hinge, but on the bottom hinge the refrigerator would have to be tilted or laid on its side. Also, you could have used a hex socket of the appropriate size instead of the “JIS #1 screw driver“ to remove the bolts.
My refrigerator is a Whirlpool that uses top hinge bolts that require an allen wrench. The bottom is another can of worms, especially with the auto-close.
The previous Whirlpool model had a bottom hinge with a plastic / nylon piece to make it close. When it broke, I made an aluminum piece that kept the door closed.
Thanks for the guide.
Pulled mine apart to examine the battery inside. It measured above 3.1 volts - even though it has been in use since June 2008 (about 9 years).
Holes will be punched for access to the 5 screws so the rubber pad does not have to be removed if it needs to be opened in the future.
I may see about buying a new Ac adapter to power this Airport Extreme since that is probably why the status light on the front did not illuminate.
So how many fans does this iMac have? The final image with the parts arranged neatly looks like it has three.
Цитата от(из) Billster:
Do you know what an optical chopper pair are? They are an IR emitter/receptor pair used to track the scroll wheel rotation. I don't think this mouse has a scroll wheel (or a chopper pair)
It's surface tracking (laser) does not use a chopper pair (no mouse does)
I am a engineer (PLC electronics manufacturing) and I can tell you this is a big change (engineering and manufacturing wise) from a standard 3 button mouse. (and I note that the logitech CORDED mice using laser tracking run $25-$80 (bluetooth run $50 & $60) so the price seems dam reasonable.
R&D Engineering and getting a production run up to speed (QC) all cost lots of money (trust me)
I just get sick of (mostly poorly informed) people bashing innovative companies for having to recoup their R&D and production set up costs. If you can't (or don't want to) afford it, wait a year or two till it becomes commonplace and most of the R&D have been recouped, the price will undoubtedly drop a bit.
The prices I see on Logitech's site are $80 and $100 for their Anywhere and Performance mice with Logitech Darkfield Laser Tracking™.
For larger tear-down images, see http://www.cnblogs.com/lzhdim/news/2009/..., and don't worry if you cannot read the language (Chinese?). It includes the Magic Mouse and iMac tear-downs.