Hello, i've come today to see a rescuer's classic universal disease: a fast-track screen repair. It's a rescuer's y7000 game. It's obviously broken, and it's gone. Savers are basically single-minded, so when a graphic card is in trouble, there's a screen like this。
This configuration is an independent graphic card of 1650i, and looking at this screen may be perceived as a problem, not a problem. Although its existence is marked by an error, eight out of ten such screens are core issues. Savers have unique gel technology, so its core is easier to weld. There's got to be a tough guy。

It's a twenty-one r9000p, and it's the same thing that goes straight to the screen. This is a relatively high-end, 3070 graphic card, and there is also a visible position to blame. A failure like this is backed up by gel technology, and it's right at the core. A lot of repairs are slowly discovering the pattern, and the error is often reflected in four angles, because it happens to be a black tape。
Because of its presence, its presence at the core is bound to explode. In this case, the core is fully replanted, the welds are cleaned, the ball is fitted with a visible memory before the core is installed. It's a hot reset, a simple test, if i don't have a screen. The success rate of this small core is generally quite high, basically once, and no longer available。

The fact that entering the bios is still a stand-alone pattern suggests that welding has been very successful and that the various oven tests of the follow-up system are normal. There's no problem. There's nothing to talk about. Speedy maintenance video doesn't talk crap anymore。




