[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Dear Ashley
>
> I had the same thing a while back. We were certain it was the mains supply
> even though we had surge protection. The local electricity supplier said it
> was most likely a welding machine on our mains circuit. Connecting welding
> equipment to the mains is against the rules by the way because of the surge
> problem. It stopped after a while and we think it was someone working on
> their car during a holiday.
>
> Bob Croxford
>
> In a message dated 1/26/03 1:21:44 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>
> << I have a really strange problem with my Lacie 19" monitor that appears to
> be
> getting worse over time. For nearly two years it worked perfectly and then
> shortly after moving to the UK the screen image started to vibrate
> occasionally producing a fuzzy display.
>
> For a while, this was only happening for a short period during the evenings,
> which I couldn't quite pinpoint, but now its spreading to other times during
> the day as well. I wrote to Lacie who said it was generally related to
> keeping mobile phones or speakers nearby, but I've stripped everything down
> in this area until I just have the computer, printer, CD writer and Wacom
> tablet. I've found that running the degauss feature a couple times seems to
> half the effect, but doesn't cure it totally.
>
> Has anybody else seen this or better still found a cure? I wonder if it may
> be related to the fuse I placed in the new plug possibly being the wrong amp
> setting? BTW I have everything running through a surge protected extension
> lead.
>
> Thanks
> Ashley >>

Ashley,

Try turning everything off in your house you possilby can,  except for the
computer and monitor,  and let me know if it still shakes?

Donald

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