FredEx
New member
Been using 2 22" monitors for years now. Second I got was given to me, I repaired the power supply, a Westinghouse 22". My OLD one is the first flat screen I ever had, a 22" Samsung. It is now about 15 years old. I totally rebuilt the power supply in it about 8 years ago. Replaced all the electrolytic caps, half had popped. I replaced them with a higher grade. NOW I'm having an issue with the Samsung. In higher compressed areas of images on it I get lines, hard to describe and an image capture will not show the problem. It only shows on the Samsung. I swapped cables from each monitor to the other and have verified it is this monitor. So this one may be on its last legs.
The Processor Tweak is my own processor. I go in October 6th for a new BI-V Pacemaker. I have a bad lead in my current one, and it only has one ventricular lead. A BI-V is a dual ventricular lead. In the standard pacemaker they run one lead into the right ventricle, when it is zapped it causes the right and left ventricle to contract to pump blood. The BI-V runs a lead into the right ventricle and a lead on the *outside* of the left ventricle. Like in compressors your heart has a low pressure side (right ventricle) and a high pressure side (left ventricle). Since the left ventricle is high pressure they can't run a lead into it, they run it into a vein in the outside of it. By zapping both ventricles you get a better more complete pump of blood. They say it is easier on the heart than the old pacemaker and better for the person. I'll just be in over night, back home Friday. No driving for a week. No %#@ing for a month. No problem there.
The Processor Tweak is my own processor. I go in October 6th for a new BI-V Pacemaker. I have a bad lead in my current one, and it only has one ventricular lead. A BI-V is a dual ventricular lead. In the standard pacemaker they run one lead into the right ventricle, when it is zapped it causes the right and left ventricle to contract to pump blood. The BI-V runs a lead into the right ventricle and a lead on the *outside* of the left ventricle. Like in compressors your heart has a low pressure side (right ventricle) and a high pressure side (left ventricle). Since the left ventricle is high pressure they can't run a lead into it, they run it into a vein in the outside of it. By zapping both ventricles you get a better more complete pump of blood. They say it is easier on the heart than the old pacemaker and better for the person. I'll just be in over night, back home Friday. No driving for a week. No %#@ing for a month. No problem there.

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