Time stamps 1:03 Nintendo 64 22:54 Bang & Olufsen Telephone 51:49 Nintendogs Cuddly Toy 1:10:05 Tefal Clothes Steamer 1:12:57 Delonghi Been to cup coffee machine 1:17:02 Water Heater/CoolerFilter All in one ×2 1:52:34 Nespresso Automatic Coffee Maker 2:13:26 Atari Lynx 2:15:20 The Outcome
Had a n64 laying in a drawer for 10years Just had a quick check, the 1.5k ohm resistor was blown, after replacement it works like a charm Thanks a lot vince!!
Vince don't beat yourself up over the controller it's exactly what 30000 other fixit people would have done and your right the important thing is it works, not what it looks like. Your still the star in fixing stuff.
Did that exact thing on an industrial heated glue hose I was repairing recently stripped down the wrong end looking for a wire break because I didn't immediately find it were I was expecting and caused myself a lot of extra work.
That phone was quite interesting. Well, the phone and that wall connector. Being from the US, I had never seen the British telephone socket. Our wall jacks are usually all RJ11 or RJ14. Older installations usually have two conductor or four conductor solid strand copper wiring, while a lot of newer installations just use something like Cat5 or Cat5e in the wall. I feel old remembering when Caller ID was a separate device that plugged in next to your phone and you had to pay a monthly fee to use it. Or the couple of times I used a rotary telephone. Or the time I used IrDA between my Nokia flip phone and my old Dell laptop to access dial-up internet. It's incredible how much technology has advanced in the past 20 years.
I love this channel. First, I am a BIG FAN of people with OVER THE TOP, OCD. 30 years ago, I did this for my family and my own gear. People never just look for the obvious and easy to fix. I learned from my networking career to always look for the easiest and single points of error. Sometimes Vince does this, other times he doesn't. His electrical knowledge is WAY MORE VAST than my own. Using a different cord, look for small bent connections, CHECK THE VOLUME AND BRIGHTNESS!! But at 60, my eyes are not what they used to be, and the steadiness of my hands are gone. So I love watching. Great Channel.
Vince I love that you've got all the background noise when you do these videos. It makes it so much more fun to know you're doing this stuff and you've got a family just doing life in the house while you're working. Watching people working in a studio is good, but watching you is more fun.
I have to say ,I really love it when Vince fixes stuff around the house and lets us have a sticky beak into his family life. Just as much as I love hearing all the noises in the background. Of course I love all his videos but I find those more personal and gratifying, we rarely ever see his wife in the videos sometimes Ben, his son, never his daughter or wife, but I like it when he talks about what his wife daughter and son would like from the stuff he fixes, after he fixes it.
How great it is to see you in 2024 still fixing things up Vince, I wish I had your knowledge to fix things like this, you're a diamond. Thank You for the fantastic videos.
Over the many years working in BT exchanges (much of the time working on the MDFs) to my knowledge I suffered no ill effects from the solder. When I left BT in '94 I 'liberated' several rolls of leaded solder. Much better than the crap used today in electronics. Great vids by the way. Greetings from G1DBS.
Best movie I have watched in a long time. I bought an Aqua Optima a couple of years ago to make a repair video. Unfortunately it worked fine, but now we use it all the time for hot and cold filtered water. The.kettle now lives in the coal cupboard.
Remember ELECTRICITY CAN EASILY KILL! Many items in this video have mains electricity powering them, power supplies can shock even when unplugged from the mains. DO NOT COPY WHAT YOU SEE IN THIS VIDEO!!!!! I hope you enjoy it for entertainment purposes only.
Or at least know what you’re doing when handling electricity. I remember working on a PS2, forgot it was plugged in, gave me a good zap from the power supply. That could have been bad. Just remember to check the capacitors and find out how to properly bleed the voltage without bleeding it into yourself. Knowledge is power. Really there should be more information on how to properly handle electricity instead of recommending people don’t fiddle with it altogether, that way if they do encounter it, they know what to do
You can clean off superglue with Acetone. Useful if it's on your fingers. Have to be careful if cleaning from plastic of course as Acetone will dissolve some plastics.
Good video. One tip - if an area is liable to get warm, don't fix it in position with hot melt as when it gets hot ... well, you get the idea! Use a blob of neutral cure silicone instead - for the Nintendo, a little under the board would stick it fine.
Thanks for shouting out the 164th United Kingdom Gadget. He is one of my favorite UA-camrs. Absolutely fearless with his repair work, fixing what no one has fixed before.
I've been a subscriber for awhile now Vince, and truly enjoy your videos and work. Watching you has revived the will to do electronic repairs myself, after a long hiatus with health issues. Your skills are far more advanced than you let on! :) Anyway, thank you for your inspiration, work and videos, you are greatly appreciated my brother. God bless, and cheers from central Kansas USA. Rev. D.
I am always amazed at how patient you are with trying absolutely everything to get something working again. Mad props for that. On the Nespresso machines I know from the DeLonghi ones as soon as they leak it is not limited to one area. What do I mean by that? So when you use the machine, there can be small little leaks throughout the internal pipework as well as the brewing chamber and the mechanism of closing it up. What is also good to know is that coffee has oils. These oils can over time hinder the sealing performance of the brewing chamber causing it to leak out the sides. In addition if the little o rings that are scattered throughout the machine do exist it is always a good thing to clean it up and (in my case) add a tiny bit of food safe Vaseline. Or replace them if they have done brittle. Having done all of that the only thing to clean was the pyramid plate to which the old style capsules get pressed against because as well as the chamber this plate is getting a lot of coffee throughput. I am sure this may not help with the new style pod systems and I do apologize about that. I still tip my head at the great lengths you went through to try to get this machine working.
I really loved the dog bit. I did feel that Kids may get the wrong idea of hitting a dog on the head to get a response. I also loved your sewing experience , keeping with the dog theme you have disproved “You can’t teach old dog new tricks” with that neat running stitch. Very enjoyable video. Doing it in two parts.
Good video. You have inspired me to fix 2 Apple Watches and 1 iPod that I had laying in a drawer. My family thinks I’m nuts but I find it fun, challenging and rewarding. I especially enjoyed your cost and profit analysis in this video. Your idea of specialization is probably the only way to make anything. eBay eats up any real profit for small timers. I do this only for fun and to reuse what I already bought. Good work.
Nice seeing the return of the N64 power supply. I fixed three myself with similar problems as in the older video, simply by replacing the top or both top resistors. A fourth one didn't have that problem and I couldn't fix it yet.
With regard to the water heater/cooler thingy, the fault to ground on a heating element is the prime failure mode. The number of times I've traced a domestic supply tripping out to a kettle, immersion heater, cooker grill or washing machine is, well, a lot! Often water gets in and soaks the mica insulation which will cause the earth fault and modern RCDs/ELCBs (or whatever the latest consumer safety device is - been out of the trade for decades) will trip at the slightest indication of a fault.
Yes, any device that involves water and causes tripping of the domestic supply, first thing to do would be to measure the resistance between earth and the supply pins.
This is also why your lights went out, as your RCD (which protects against earth leakage) would be protecting a number of different circuits. If it was a L-N short it would've tripped the MCB and only your sockets would've lost power.
Well thank you Vince! I have 5 B&O phones in my home and over the past year one by one they went out commission (except one). I was told that my house wiring was probably at fault but nobody I could find would work on phone house wiring. When I saw your video, I thought Vince can fix just about anything! Having seen your video, I'm now convinced I must have that "incompatibility issue" as well. I have Apple phones as well so it wasn't a communication issue, I just loved having the B&O designs throughout my home. I guess they'll be "trailer queens" going forward but it sure is a relief to finally discover what the issue is! PS LOVE your Rolls Royce videos! Can hardly wait for each episode. Warmest regards, Nicholas
A tip for you! To open the the the telephone or any adapter that is glued together, use a druplet of fuell it will soak into the crack and it will open so much easier. You really helped me think in different way and diagnose problems in my own broken devices! Great vids
I kinda thought that because you had not posted anything recently that you were going to do a long video job lot and you did! Awesome. Sorry about not being able to fix them all but that is life. It's a gamble with a pay out or loss. Most products that are for "spares or repairs" are for those who, like you, want to fix them and keep them...at least that is what I have seen watching several repair videos on here. But you are very talented and also a great entertainer! I think I enjoy it most when you get excited once finding the flaw and then when you get it to work. See you in the next one! Cheers!
I remember when Vince just could not remove chips from circuit boards now he does it literally in his sleep and his acquisition of skills is on a par with his acquisition of specialist tools.
@@incandescentwithrage agreed - this was a relatively low current leaking to earth, 30mA is the standard trip current here in the UK, not an overcurrent issue. Having said that, a halogen bulb in circuit would useful for your bench. Keep up the good work Vince!
That Nespresso machine, not to mention the pods looks like a money spinner.. and as unreliable as most capsule machines I've come across. They always end up leaking or failing, the pods are bad for the planet and expensive... I ended up buying a decent filter coffee machine and put paper filters in it and scoops of fresh coffee. Works everytime and saves a fortune, and seriously doesn't take that long. I'm sure though there will be a user demographic that loves these things. Brilliant video, the dog fix cracked me up. Look forward to better weather and return of the Rolls! 😊
@@Mymatevince Best Nespresso machine for me is the original pods and the machine I use is a sage creatista plus such a fantastic machine nd also as a steam wand , different programmes with a display and the display does step by step descaling making it easy. My friend bought one of those you have and it also broke down and wished he had gone with the original as many many people have issues with it.
I looked up just as you brought out the yellow Mat. Now when I close my eyes I can see through the back of my head 🥴 😂. Skip content in a Vince video, after now having a new video for two weeks ! Are yeah maaad !!! 🥰😂❤️
Exactly. Now the red mat is also a mad colour but it doesn’t affect the camera automatic contrast control so we can see what Vince is working on. If Vince were to learn anything from BigClive then looking at the colour choices and lighting in his setup would be my recommendation. 😀👍
I have the BT grey and orange screwdriver you mentioned. Had it since 2000 when I started BT and still have it now! Not been with BT since 2015 and it's still going strong.
So glad you have finally done some more Retro devices... They are just really cool and if people buy them then your videos are invaluable. I know you don't like to repeat videos/ fixes but the view enjoy them being updated as you go along :) Thanks vince
At work I use a boxed 0603 resistor set I bought ~ 5 yes ago with EIA-96 codes that use a 2 digit 01-99 code and a letter multiplier, so 1.5K would be 18B , it can get confusing when you refill pots with (old?) code parts which are still sold by the major suppliers. LOL, yes its nice when all the codes are oriented the same. Will split the watching and enjoy at the weekend.
I'm part of a repair cafe in New Zealand and we have had a few similar coffee machines leaking. It turned out to be a perished or shrunk seal ring where the tank slots into the base. We cut down a key ring to form a metal ring and slipped it under the seal to make it a tighter fit. This seems to work. Not sure if this helps but worth a look. Great videos by the way.
With reference to glueing back the head set on the telephone. Use Tamiya extra thin model glue, you can put it together and with the small brush it will capillary in. Probably the same chemical they used in the first place, as it welds the plastic by chemical melting..
It kept me distracted from the incoming storm and entertained all afternoon; if that makes the pain worth wile. It’s a complicated way to make a coffee tho.
Yet another great video Vince, keep them coming. Me personally, when I'm not developing Android apps or Windows based stock control systems for my clients, I too enjoy buying faulty, spares and repairs items from eBay. Once I have thoroughly tested the repaired items I don't resell them on eBay, but I sell them on FB Marketplace. I just set a price that I'm happy with and leave the item on there until it sells which usually only takes less than 2 weeks. You will be surprised how far people will drive to pick up an item.
I had the same with a second hand DolceGusto. You need to remove and set the water container 20+ times to prime the pump. No need to activate the machine. This will push a little bit of water in each time you set it down. No need to use a zip lock and cause a mess.
@@Mymatevince You're welcome! Thanks for the great content. You should see bubbles raising from the bottom during the "pumping" action with the water tank, which indicate it works.
Although maybe not worth it, the old school in me says put a mechanical toggle switch on that phone and wire it to that feature soft key. Now that's fixin'. Good stuff, another interesting video!
10:35 That resistor has 18B printed on it as it's marked with the EIA-96 code for a 1500 ohm part. The 1 has a dash underneath to avoid reading it upside down.
been watching your videos for a while and just after Christmas we had the washer and tumble dryer both fail. Instead of just going out and getting new which after Christmas is not a good thing, Idecided to at least see whats wrong with them. Washing machine the pump impeller had broken so couldn't pump water, dryer needed new heating element and changed water pump as the bearing was getting very noisy when in use, £50 in parts and a few hours and both fixed, so nothing to scrap and no expensive trip to Currys.
I have a different hot water dispencer that doesn'r have the cold water feature, I wouldn't use a kettle ever again because the dispenser is quick and uses only energy to boil the water you need. 👍 loved the stream.
Completely agree with the profit being a struggle on eBay! I think the best way to play it is source from a supplier locally, build a good rapport with them, and do it that way to save on fees/postage etc. Great video Vince 👍👍
A tip for removing electronics with many identical connectors is drawing a line over them(when the plug is still connected) with a permanent marker, ideally different colours for every plug connector combo. Just make ever connection unique. That way if you put it back together then it's just a matter of completing the marking on the connection.
Great video! I love the format! About the leaking Nespresso machine: all capsule machines I owned so far, leaked at the seal, the water container sits on. Most of the time due to scaling built up
The yellow mat really is so bright really burns my retinas... Also always cut and test cables at the grommets before you cut the in connectors cuz that's usually where they fail..
I used to work for a 3rd party telecoms company, Customer complaint was Customer can’t hear you sometimes. Digital lines were checked, line card replaced ( out of hrs 11pm!) no change, full system swap out off hours. Tech support and manufacturers engineers at a loss. I get set to site I have the tenacity of a rabid Rottweiler. Girls explain that the problem has got much worse since they moved desks. The room has a vaulted ceiling, I noticed I can hear every thing in the room. The girls are using noise cancelling microphones on the headsets were lowering the persons voice volume in response to the ambient background noise, when on a call in the room you can hear everything around them through the phone line. I gave the girls some cheaper non voice cancelling headsets and the girls went to work. I had to prove to their bosses and mine the problem but this is the benefit of attending site rather than remote diagnosis.
We have the same problem with 2 virtuos -- it constantly reports the need to descale. If you do not descale within the next dozen or so cups of coffee, it will stop working until you do perform the descale. But the light never resets. I believe there is a sensor which reports when the scale gets bad enough to need a descale but the descale chemical is not stone enough to clean up after our hard water. As for the water leaking, it is most likely coming from that bottom of the reservoir and its base. If those do not sit perfectly flat, the mating surfaces will not perform a seal. Try a bit of paper towel (kitchen roll is it called?) on the base next to the water inlet to see if it is leaking out of there. Alternatively, there may be a pin-hole in the water line and the pump could not pull the water through the line which was leaking air. Think: "straw with a hole in it."
Re hot water dispensers,we are on our 3rd Murphy Richard’s 131004 Redifine. The first 2 failed after 3 and 2.5 years. Both and I suspect our current one have inbuilt failure. They start to leak when dispensing water there is a pipe between the boiler and the dispensing solenoid and nozzles. The pipe cracks and breaks to pieces causing a leak. The plastic seems to be heat sensitive. Why a 3rd you ask it can make one cup of drink with both nozzles or 2 cups of drink, one can be tea the other coffee!
Thanks again for buying these products from us! :) 1. I think the filter for the tefal steamer is available on ebay. 2. The delonghi coffee machine was a surprise, it was not working for us. 3. Aurora Water Dispenser: We had about 10-20 of them so far, all killed the electricity for some reason. 4. Nespresso coffe machines have this leak issue unfortunately, looking forward to find out what causing it. The one we are using is leaking as well, we need to empty the water tank after every usage.
Thanks for the tips and background on the items. Another comment came in saying the water pump can be intermittent on the Delonghi coffee machine so I will put it into use for a while, the delivery might have shaken it up to get it to work, but it may stop again 👍👍👍
I've a bit of experience when it comes to Nespresso coffee machines (as my parents were Nespresso users), and I can tell you, out of 3 machines I've tried to repair, only 1 got fixed, and worked for only a week, they're stupidly complicated to take apart and understand. It's just not worth it. And, while coffee machines are "new" to me, I'm not new when it comes to repairing anything electronics related.
Did the machines you have leak clean water? The coffee brewing chamber is full of rubber seals and moving parts. I can see how this can be difficult. But in this case the leaks is somewhere between the reservoir and the end of the tube that forces the water in the brewing chamber. In this case I think there's some hope. There's a very good video on youtube (Nespresso VertutoPlus leaking, full disassembly and cleaning.) that shows how to disassemble these machines. It describes a different leak though (a leak of the brewing chamber).
@@kriswillems5661 The one I fixed was leaking clean water from a hard plastic tube that connects the pump to the boiler, had to change an o-ring and make a new metal clip, then, after a week, it started leaking near the pump. But if the video you mentioned fixes the problem that vince has, it's at least worth a try.
The leaking nespresso could be one of the silicone lines where they connect together. I've repaired an older model with the same problem and it was such a connection. It looks like an overcomplicated quick connect with a small O-ring inside. Of course It's the small O-ring that is bad. You probably have to look a bit for a replacement, because those red/blue assortment boxes with nitrile rings does have the right diameter, but the thinkness is too small.
Vince, thanks for the video. You shouldn't just drop screwdrivers or other metal onto a PCB to short out stuff because you could send a voltage into a component that is sensitive and blow that up. Discharge it properly if required. You measured it, and it was pretty much discharged, so why try to short it out with a tool? It's easy to discharge caps properly if you need to.
I think it is just in case my probes didn't pierce through the conformal coating, just belt and braces and slightly OCD thing to do. I appreciate it is pointless if I have already measured it and seen a voltage on the meter 👍
Dear Vince, great videos. Stopped for a moment after B&O phone fix to comment. There is a rating on POTS (plain old telephone service) phones called the ringer current. Most digital phone interface devices provide a substantial lower ring current. If the phone requires higher ring current to function, it pulls down the ring voltage past the off-hook detect level. This in turn registers as a pickup, after which the current drain drops which immediately registers as a hangup. The only ways around this are to either use a different voip interface devices that provides higher ring current or add an external power source to the phone so it requires less ring current to function, since by default it is siphoning power from the ringing line.
Very interesting, that sounds like the exact thing that is happening. Maybe this is why every so often it rings. If it is borderline on the ring current then once it gets past the first ring it will keep on ringing. How fascinating, nice one Rob!!!!!!👍😎
@@Mymatevince From memory, BT used to refer to this as REN; Ringer Equivalence Number. BT would only support up to a total REN on any one phone line of 4. Each phone had a REN that was found in the documentation, maybe on the sticker or in the manual. Add up all the RENs of all connected phones and if it exceeds 4, don't expect BT to respond to a fault about ringing problems. I seem to recall (and this is a very vague recollection) some Cisco 2-port Analogue Telephone Adaptor stating that it could handle connected device(s) up to a REN of 1.3 per port. Looks like it says REN=1 on the sticker, and one would assume VM would have specified their hub to handle at least a REN of 1, but if either is not meeting specifications, seems a reasonable place to explore. I don't think you can use your multimeter to measure the ring current accurately; they're typically designed to measure 50/60Hz and the ring signal is half that and it's pulsed. An oscilloscope across the phone line of real line vs VM adaptor may be interesting as if the peaks on the VM adaptor are lower, that would tend to corroborate this as the problem. You can measure current with an oscilloscope with the assistance of a shunt resistor in series with the circuit. 1V on the scope measured across an 0.1ohm resistor =10A current. Beware a ringing phone line can hit 100V so no touchy the wires while testing, else the zap will tell you off!
We have a smaller Nespresso machine. It works very well and gets daily use. However it will leak occasionally, sometimes the water container doesn’t seem to seat properly. Stick with it.
Nice one Mike, it appears to be doing well. I thought I was going to get slated for the 2 hour+ length, but I think the incoming storm in the UK has done me a favour today with people staying in 😂
Hi Vince, first time commenting, but i have looked a few of your videos. It is really good to see, that there are still persons out there, who have the mentality to try to fix things. I personaly LOVE to fix things, because if it´s borken, then I can´t brake it anymore, it is already borken. Now when I as looking/listening you Nesspresso part, it sounded a lot like she (all machines have a female soul) can´t push the water throught the heater, hence the descaleing request from the machine and leaking clean water afterwards, because pump has the preassure up, but there is now where to go. Just my two cents. Keep up the fixing spirit.
Looking forward to watching this video Vince. I've been gutted that you hadn't uploaded anything for 3 weeks. Happy to see a new video, even more excited that it's 2 hours and 20 minutes long. Woo hoo. 😁
I spent much of the last 13 years working, amongst other thing, with postal franking machines that back in the earlier days rang up on a telephone line. As customers began to move from (Norwegian) PTSN lines to VOIP we had huge problems with dropped calls (all outgoing) Over time I learned which VOIP adapters worked, which didn’t and which worked if we turned the modem settings down to their lowest possible settings of 2400 baud. From what I could figure out much of it came down to the amount of current a device would draw as sometimes this overloaded a VOIP adapter. While an old BT line could support phones with a REN (Ring Equivalent Number) of (from memory) 4 in total, many VOIP systems fail before even reaching 1, so an older phone like that BnO one might simply overload the VOIP box when it calls in and had to drive the ring citcuits.
Thanks for the detailed info. Other comments also mentioned the same thing. When I get the phone back I think it would be good to see if it is possible to somehow weaken the ring to get it to work. It would be a bodge, but if a variable resistor or diode or something could be put into the circuit it might weaken it enough to work. Might make a good tea break fix. Thanks for sharing your knowledge 👍👍👍
@@Mymatevince I don't think this is anything to do with the phone not being "VOIP-aware". I would be very surprised if a B&O phone didn't comply with the BT SIN standard for connection to the PSTN. I'd be less surprised if a Sky router didn't provide enough ring current. If you can track down an old BT REN booster (I used to have one) that might confirm the situation. I see several posts on-line asking what REN the Sky router provides, but no published spec. See www.shop.bt.com/content/uni2/documentation/4kqv/bt-ren-booster.pdf
While true, resistors still work by converting the energy. If you encase them in some well insulating glue, they'll eventually just cook themselves. Highly doubt anything else would cause them to fail in this case :)
52 mins in, thoroughly enjoying this :) that voip to old analog phone incompatibility stumps me too, i have never seen this! gonna get a refreshing drink, on with the show! :D
Time stamps
1:03 Nintendo 64
22:54 Bang & Olufsen Telephone
51:49 Nintendogs Cuddly Toy
1:10:05 Tefal Clothes Steamer
1:12:57 Delonghi Been to cup coffee machine
1:17:02 Water Heater/CoolerFilter All in one ×2
1:52:34 Nespresso Automatic Coffee Maker
2:13:26 Atari Lynx
2:15:20 The Outcome
Fuck thanks!
Thanks for the timestamps. 👍
Thanks Anders
Had a n64 laying in a drawer for 10years
Just had a quick check, the 1.5k ohm resistor was blown, after replacement it works like a charm
Thanks a lot vince!!
The way you were slapping the dog on the head 😂... lovely feature length episode Vince. Thoroughly enjoyed that! 👍
😂 I think he liked it!!! Cheers Steve
@@turjiI'm not sure about stez but from my experience MG chemicals makes the best flux
He was slapping that poor dog like it owed him money 😂
Stupid dog 😂 sorry - wrong channel!
RSPCA has been called
Vince don't beat yourself up over the controller it's exactly what 30000 other fixit people would have done and your right the important thing is it works, not what it looks like. Your still the star in fixing stuff.
Did that exact thing on an industrial heated glue hose I was repairing recently stripped down the wrong end looking for a wire break because I didn't immediately find it were I was expecting and caused myself a lot of extra work.
That phone was quite interesting. Well, the phone and that wall connector. Being from the US, I had never seen the British telephone socket. Our wall jacks are usually all RJ11 or RJ14. Older installations usually have two conductor or four conductor solid strand copper wiring, while a lot of newer installations just use something like Cat5 or Cat5e in the wall. I feel old remembering when Caller ID was a separate device that plugged in next to your phone and you had to pay a monthly fee to use it. Or the couple of times I used a rotary telephone. Or the time I used IrDA between my Nokia flip phone and my old Dell laptop to access dial-up internet. It's incredible how much technology has advanced in the past 20 years.
I love this channel. First, I am a BIG FAN of people with OVER THE TOP, OCD. 30 years ago, I did this for my family and my own gear. People never just look for the obvious and easy to fix. I learned from my networking career to always look for the easiest and single points of error.
Sometimes Vince does this, other times he doesn't. His electrical knowledge is WAY MORE VAST than my own. Using a different cord, look for small bent connections, CHECK THE VOLUME AND BRIGHTNESS!! But at 60, my eyes are not what they used to be, and the steadiness of my hands are gone. So I love watching. Great Channel.
Thank you Ron, very kind words indeed. Big thumbs to you 👍👍👍👍
Vince I love that you've got all the background noise when you do these videos. It makes it so much more fun to know you're doing this stuff and you've got a family just doing life in the house while you're working. Watching people working in a studio is good, but watching you is more fun.
I totally agree. Love the background noises. 😊
Yes. This is most people's reality when they are not professionals with a shop
yeah, its brilliant. I hope Mrs Vince wasnt too pissed off at the power tripping while she was in the kitchen :)
I have to say ,I really love it when Vince fixes stuff around the house and lets us have a sticky beak into his family life. Just as much as I love hearing all the noises in the background. Of course I love all his videos but I find those more personal and gratifying, we rarely ever see his wife in the videos sometimes Ben, his son, never his daughter or wife, but I like it when he talks about what his wife daughter and son would like from the stuff he fixes, after he fixes it.
@@theatheobhv I totally agree it makes the fix it videos have more warmth and personality.
How great it is to see you in 2024 still fixing things up Vince, I wish I had your knowledge to fix things like this, you're a diamond. Thank You for the fantastic videos.
Over the many years working in BT exchanges (much of the time working on the MDFs) to my knowledge I suffered no ill effects from the solder. When I left BT in '94 I 'liberated' several rolls of leaded solder. Much better than the crap used today in electronics. Great vids by the way. Greetings from G1DBS.
Best movie I have watched in a long time. I bought an Aqua Optima a couple of years ago to make a repair video. Unfortunately it worked fine, but now we use it all the time for hot and cold filtered water. The.kettle now lives in the coal cupboard.
Remember ELECTRICITY CAN EASILY KILL! Many items in this video have mains electricity powering them, power supplies can shock even when unplugged from the mains. DO NOT COPY WHAT YOU SEE IN THIS VIDEO!!!!! I hope you enjoy it for entertainment purposes only.
Or at least know what you’re doing when handling electricity. I remember working on a PS2, forgot it was plugged in, gave me a good zap from the power supply. That could have been bad. Just remember to check the capacitors and find out how to properly bleed the voltage without bleeding it into yourself. Knowledge is power. Really there should be more information on how to properly handle electricity instead of recommending people don’t fiddle with it altogether, that way if they do encounter it, they know what to do
You can clean off superglue with Acetone. Useful if it's on your fingers. Have to be careful if cleaning from plastic of course as Acetone will dissolve some plastics.
Or vinegar in a smelly pinch
funny thing
I knew it was the heating element before you opened it
but you did a great job diagnosing and finding it
Good video. One tip - if an area is liable to get warm, don't fix it in position with hot melt as when it gets hot ... well, you get the idea! Use a blob of neutral cure silicone instead - for the Nintendo, a little under the board would stick it fine.
Thanks Andy👍👍👍
Heh, I had forgotten that some people use white neutral cure silicone to fix things in place on circuit boards thank you for the remind.
Thanks for shouting out the 164th United Kingdom Gadget. He is one of my favorite UA-camrs. Absolutely fearless with his repair work, fixing what no one has fixed before.
Chris is a legend and a lovely bloke👍
I've been a subscriber for awhile now Vince, and truly enjoy your videos and work. Watching you has revived the will to do electronic repairs myself, after a long hiatus with health issues. Your skills are far more advanced than you let on! :) Anyway, thank you for your inspiration, work and videos, you are greatly appreciated my brother. God bless, and cheers from central Kansas USA. Rev. D.
I am always amazed at how patient you are with trying absolutely everything to get something working again. Mad props for that. On the Nespresso machines I know from the DeLonghi ones as soon as they leak it is not limited to one area. What do I mean by that? So when you use the machine, there can be small little leaks throughout the internal pipework as well as the brewing chamber and the mechanism of closing it up. What is also good to know is that coffee has oils. These oils can over time hinder the sealing performance of the brewing chamber causing it to leak out the sides. In addition if the little o rings that are scattered throughout the machine do exist it is always a good thing to clean it up and (in my case) add a tiny bit of food safe Vaseline. Or replace them if they have done brittle. Having done all of that the only thing to clean was the pyramid plate to which the old style capsules get pressed against because as well as the chamber this plate is getting a lot of coffee throughput. I am sure this may not help with the new style pod systems and I do apologize about that. I still tip my head at the great lengths you went through to try to get this machine working.
Thanks for the tips!
I really loved the dog bit. I did feel that Kids may get the wrong idea of hitting a dog on the head to get a response. I also loved your sewing experience , keeping with the dog theme you have disproved “You can’t teach old dog new tricks” with that neat running stitch. Very enjoyable video. Doing it in two parts.
Vince finally realizing low airspeed works lika a charm.
Good video. You have inspired me to fix 2 Apple Watches and 1 iPod that I had laying in a drawer. My family thinks I’m nuts but I find it fun, challenging and rewarding. I especially enjoyed your cost and profit analysis in this video. Your idea of specialization is probably the only way to make anything. eBay eats up any real profit for small timers. I do this only for fun and to reuse what I already bought. Good work.
Nice seeing the return of the N64 power supply. I fixed three myself with similar problems as in the older video, simply by replacing the top or both top resistors. A fourth one didn't have that problem and I couldn't fix it yet.
This is one of the best channels on UA-cam. Keep making videos and I'll keep watching them.
Not just this job, but all your repairs, your an inspiration ! Well Done mate !
With regard to the water heater/cooler thingy, the fault to ground on a heating element is the prime failure mode. The number of times I've traced a domestic supply tripping out to a kettle, immersion heater, cooker grill or washing machine is, well, a lot! Often water gets in and soaks the mica insulation which will cause the earth fault and modern RCDs/ELCBs (or whatever the latest consumer safety device is - been out of the trade for decades) will trip at the slightest indication of a fault.
Yes, any device that involves water and causes tripping of the domestic supply, first thing to do would be to measure the resistance between earth and the supply pins.
This is also why your lights went out, as your RCD (which protects against earth leakage) would be protecting a number of different circuits. If it was a L-N short it would've tripped the MCB and only your sockets would've lost power.
Well thank you Vince! I have 5 B&O phones in my home and over the past year one by one they went out commission (except one). I was told that my house wiring was probably at fault but nobody I could find would work on phone house wiring. When I saw your video, I thought Vince can fix just about anything! Having seen your video, I'm now convinced I must have that "incompatibility issue" as well. I have Apple phones as well so it wasn't a communication issue, I just loved having the B&O designs throughout my home. I guess they'll be "trailer queens" going forward but it sure is a relief to finally discover what the issue is! PS LOVE your Rolls Royce videos! Can hardly wait for each episode. Warmest regards, Nicholas
Thanks Nicholas, I think I am going to revisit the phone. A few suggestions have come in so I want to experiment on a few of them👍
I absolutely loved this type of format .
🎶 It's beginning to look a lot like broken items everywhere you go. But the prettiest site to see is My Mate Vince fixing these on your old computer.🎶
@56:43, someone please remind me not to let Vince look after my dog! haha! Great compilation of fixes!
Blame Nintendont 😂😂
Lol when he had his hand inside it ha ha
See. Now "that's" COMEDY
A tip for you! To open the the the telephone or any adapter that is glued together, use a druplet of fuell it will soak into the crack and it will open so much easier. You really helped me think in different way and diagnose problems in my own broken devices! Great vids
I kinda thought that because you had not posted anything recently that you were going to do a long video job lot and you did! Awesome. Sorry about not being able to fix them all but that is life. It's a gamble with a pay out or loss. Most products that are for "spares or repairs" are for those who, like you, want to fix them and keep them...at least that is what I have seen watching several repair videos on here. But you are very talented and also a great entertainer! I think I enjoy it most when you get excited once finding the flaw and then when you get it to work. See you in the next one! Cheers!
Thank you👍
You have certainly come a huge way in your repairs. We'll done mate.
Thank you Paul👍
I remember when Vince just could not remove chips from circuit boards now he does it literally in his sleep and his acquisition of skills is on a par with his acquisition of specialist tools.
You should make yourself a "Dim bulb/Current limiter". It's a bit safer than having your circuit breakers pop.
Won't make a difference for RCD / GFCI protected circuits, which they all are in the vast majority of UK houses.
@@incandescentwithrage agreed - this was a relatively low current leaking to earth, 30mA is the standard trip current here in the UK, not an overcurrent issue. Having said that, a halogen bulb in circuit would useful for your bench. Keep up the good work Vince!
Or plug the device in to a 13A socket RCD adapter, like the type you can get at B&Q. Then there's no risk of affecting everything else in the house.
Vince-you so need an isolation transformer!
That Nespresso machine, not to mention the pods looks like a money spinner.. and as unreliable as most capsule machines I've come across. They always end up leaking or failing, the pods are bad for the planet and expensive... I ended up buying a decent filter coffee machine and put paper filters in it and scoops of fresh coffee. Works everytime and saves a fortune, and seriously doesn't take that long. I'm sure though there will be a user demographic that loves these things. Brilliant video, the dog fix cracked me up. Look forward to better weather and return of the Rolls! 😊
Thanks Midi, I'm hoping to get in a day or 2 on the car this week or next, it's been too long already 👍
@@Mymatevince Best Nespresso machine for me is the original pods and the machine I use is a sage creatista plus such a fantastic machine nd also as a steam wand , different programmes with a display and the display does step by step descaling making it easy. My friend bought one of those you have and it also broke down and wished he had gone with the original as many many people have issues with it.
I looked up just as you brought out the yellow Mat. Now when I close my eyes I can see through the back of my head 🥴 😂. Skip content in a Vince video, after now having a new video for two weeks ! Are yeah maaad !!! 🥰😂❤️
Exactly. Now the red mat is also a mad colour but it doesn’t affect the camera automatic contrast control so we can see what Vince is working on. If Vince were to learn anything from BigClive then looking at the colour choices and lighting in his setup would be my recommendation. 😀👍
I have the easythreed K7 and added Y and X endstops to the unit and it definitely makes the machine much smoother running.
feature length episode Great to have you back
I have the BT grey and orange screwdriver you mentioned. Had it since 2000 when I started BT and still have it now! Not been with BT since 2015 and it's still going strong.
Also loved the video as always. Love these and the RR videos :-)
Thank you
👍
So glad you have finally done some more Retro devices... They are just really cool and if people buy them then your videos are invaluable. I know you don't like to repeat videos/ fixes but the view enjoy them being updated as you go along :)
Thanks vince
At work I use a boxed 0603 resistor set I bought ~ 5 yes ago with EIA-96 codes that use a 2 digit 01-99 code and a letter multiplier, so 1.5K would be 18B , it can get confusing when you refill pots with (old?) code parts which are still sold by the major suppliers. LOL, yes its nice when all the codes are oriented the same. Will split the watching and enjoy at the weekend.
Only 12 minutes into his first video of the year and Vince is already back on the IPA...
I'm part of a repair cafe in New Zealand and we have had a few similar coffee machines leaking. It turned out to be a perished or shrunk seal ring where the tank slots into the base. We cut down a key ring to form a metal ring and slipped it under the seal to make it a tighter fit. This seems to work. Not sure if this helps but worth a look. Great videos by the way.
Thanks for the tip👍
With reference to glueing back the head set on the telephone. Use Tamiya extra thin model glue, you can put it together and with the small brush it will capillary in. Probably the same chemical they used in the first place, as it welds the plastic by chemical melting..
Thanks for the tip👍
on the last one , thinking too narrow pipes and jets, excess pressure. Did love the action of it.
2 hours of vince fixing stuff? We are eating good today.
It kept me distracted from the incoming storm and entertained all afternoon; if that makes the pain worth wile. It’s a complicated way to make a coffee tho.
What a treat 😊 2 hour Vince video 🙏
For the Nespresso Automatic Coffee Maker buy a bag of citric acid powder, a few spoon fulls in the tank, run then leave over night, Works wonders
Well, my year's starting of strong. Thanks for another one of these vince!
Yet another great video Vince, keep them coming. Me personally, when I'm not developing Android apps or Windows based stock control systems for my clients, I too enjoy buying faulty, spares and repairs items from eBay. Once I have thoroughly tested the repaired items I don't resell them on eBay, but I sell them on FB Marketplace. I just set a price that I'm happy with and leave the item on there until it sells which usually only takes less than 2 weeks. You will be surprised how far people will drive to pick up an item.
Regarding the cold water,in Scotland we have the luxury of beautifully soft , fresh water ,icy cold ,straight from the tap.
loved having this on, i personally think the lack of steamer filters is mad, that there isn't even any third party ones available!
I had the same with a second hand DolceGusto. You need to remove and set the water container 20+ times to prime the pump. No need to activate the machine. This will push a little bit of water in each time you set it down. No need to use a zip lock and cause a mess.
Interesting, so everytime you put the water container down a little bit of water must get pushed through. What a great idea, thanks for sharing it 👍👍
@@Mymatevince You're welcome! Thanks for the great content. You should see bubbles raising from the bottom during the "pumping" action with the water tank, which indicate it works.
Although maybe not worth it, the old school in me says put a mechanical toggle switch on that phone and wire it to that feature soft key. Now that's fixin'. Good stuff, another interesting video!
A blessing from My Mate Vince. 🎉❤
10:35 That resistor has 18B printed on it as it's marked with the EIA-96 code for a 1500 ohm part. The 1 has a dash underneath to avoid reading it upside down.
Thank you 👍👍👍
been watching your videos for a while and just after Christmas we had the washer and tumble dryer both fail. Instead of just going out and getting new which after Christmas is not a good thing, Idecided to at least see whats wrong with them. Washing machine the pump impeller had broken so couldn't pump water, dryer needed new heating element and changed water pump as the bearing was getting very noisy when in use, £50 in parts and a few hours and both fixed, so nothing to scrap and no expensive trip to Currys.
I have a different hot water dispencer that doesn'r have the cold water feature, I wouldn't use a kettle ever again because the dispenser is quick and uses only energy to boil the water you need. 👍 loved the stream.
Completely agree with the profit being a struggle on eBay! I think the best way to play it is source from a supplier locally, build a good rapport with them, and do it that way to save on fees/postage etc. Great video Vince 👍👍
Cheers Joey😎
A tip for removing electronics with many identical connectors is drawing a line over them(when the plug is still connected) with a permanent marker, ideally different colours for every plug connector combo. Just make ever connection unique. That way if you put it back together then it's just a matter of completing the marking on the connection.
Great video! I love the format! About the leaking Nespresso machine: all capsule machines I owned so far, leaked at the seal, the water container sits on. Most of the time due to scaling built up
The yellow mat really is so bright really burns my retinas... Also always cut and test cables at the grommets before you cut the in connectors cuz that's usually where they fail..
Super cool to see you having a LTT Screwdriver. A crossover I wasn’t ready for! Thanks for still making videos!
I've always loved the cleverness of B&O design. That handset does scream "1980s!" doesn't it? :) Proud Beocenter 9500 owner!
What an awesome selection of items to fix. I found it very interesting. Shame some of them failed but that's part of the gamble.
Thanks Devtty!
I used to work for a 3rd party telecoms company, Customer complaint was Customer can’t hear you sometimes. Digital lines were checked, line card replaced ( out of hrs 11pm!) no change, full system swap out off hours. Tech support and manufacturers engineers at a loss. I get set to site I have the tenacity of a rabid Rottweiler.
Girls explain that the problem has got much worse since they moved desks. The room has a vaulted ceiling, I noticed I can hear every thing in the room. The girls are using noise cancelling microphones on the headsets were lowering the persons voice volume in response to the ambient background noise, when on a call in the room you can hear everything around them through the phone line.
I gave the girls some cheaper non voice cancelling headsets and the girls went to work.
I had to prove to their bosses and mine the problem but this is the benefit of attending site rather than remote diagnosis.
Starting the year off strong, Vince! What a treat, what fixes! Thank you so much for the video!!!
We have the same problem with 2 virtuos -- it constantly reports the need to descale. If you do not descale within the next dozen or so cups of coffee, it will stop working until you do perform the descale. But the light never resets. I believe there is a sensor which reports when the scale gets bad enough to need a descale but the descale chemical is not stone enough to clean up after our hard water.
As for the water leaking, it is most likely coming from that bottom of the reservoir and its base. If those do not sit perfectly flat, the mating surfaces will not perform a seal. Try a bit of paper towel (kitchen roll is it called?) on the base next to the water inlet to see if it is leaking out of there. Alternatively, there may be a pin-hole in the water line and the pump could not pull the water through the line which was leaking air. Think: "straw with a hole in it."
Thank you Adam 👍
Re hot water dispensers,we are on our 3rd Murphy Richard’s 131004 Redifine. The first 2 failed after 3 and 2.5 years. Both and I suspect our current one have inbuilt failure. They start to leak when dispensing water there is a pipe between the boiler and the dispensing solenoid and nozzles. The pipe cracks and breaks to pieces causing a leak. The plastic seems to be heat sensitive.
Why a 3rd you ask it can make one cup of drink with both nozzles or 2 cups of drink, one can be tea the other coffee!
I love watching you fix things and explore falts I'm the same hate throwing thing away prefare to fix and enjoy doing it.
when they go into place on their own like that is sooo satisfying lol
Another great fix it video. You are the master of fix it yourself. Best wishes from the USA!!
The Rolls Royce videos ARE awesome! @1:05:12 That dog though. Imagine your young one playing with it all day. :O
😂 The stuff of nightmares!!!
Thanks again for buying these products from us! :)
1. I think the filter for the tefal steamer is available on ebay.
2. The delonghi coffee machine was a surprise, it was not working for us.
3. Aurora Water Dispenser: We had about 10-20 of them so far, all killed the electricity for some reason.
4. Nespresso coffe machines have this leak issue unfortunately, looking forward to find out what causing it. The one we are using is leaking as well, we need to empty the water tank after every usage.
Thanks for the tips and background on the items. Another comment came in saying the water pump can be intermittent on the Delonghi coffee machine so I will put it into use for a while, the delivery might have shaken it up to get it to work, but it may stop again 👍👍👍
@@Mymatevince do You have a public email address where I could contact You? :)
Enjoyed the feature length episode just finished up watching top work 👍👍
Nice Video, Vince, as always. Over 2 hours gone like a bang (& Olufsen) 😝
I've a bit of experience when it comes to Nespresso coffee machines (as my parents were Nespresso users), and I can tell you, out of 3 machines I've tried to repair, only 1 got fixed, and worked for only a week, they're stupidly complicated to take apart and understand. It's just not worth it.
And, while coffee machines are "new" to me, I'm not new when it comes to repairing anything electronics related.
Did the machines you have leak clean water? The coffee brewing chamber is full of rubber seals and moving parts. I can see how this can be difficult. But in this case the leaks is somewhere between the reservoir and the end of the tube that forces the water in the brewing chamber. In this case I think there's some hope. There's a very good video on youtube (Nespresso VertutoPlus leaking, full disassembly and cleaning.) that shows how to disassemble these machines. It describes a different leak though (a leak of the brewing chamber).
@@kriswillems5661 The one I fixed was leaking clean water from a hard plastic tube that connects the pump to the boiler, had to change an o-ring and make a new metal clip, then, after a week, it started leaking near the pump. But if the video you mentioned fixes the problem that vince has, it's at least worth a try.
Awesome, so glad to see you're back after a while Vince. Was getting a little worried about ya mate.
Glad to see the N64 PSU fix you discovered a while back is still working it's magic 😄 What a result with the Atari Lynx too!
Finally a video! Happy 2024 Vince!
Thank you, you too!!!
Can’t remember ever watching a UA-cam video 2hrs+ 👍🏼🙂
The leaking nespresso could be one of the silicone lines where they connect together. I've repaired an older model with the same problem and it was such a connection. It looks like an overcomplicated quick connect with a small O-ring inside. Of course It's the small O-ring that is bad.
You probably have to look a bit for a replacement, because those red/blue assortment boxes with nitrile rings does have the right diameter, but the thinkness is too small.
Vince, thanks for the video. You shouldn't just drop screwdrivers or other metal onto a PCB to short out stuff because you could send a voltage into a component that is sensitive and blow that up. Discharge it properly if required. You measured it, and it was pretty much discharged, so why try to short it out with a tool?
It's easy to discharge caps properly if you need to.
I think it is just in case my probes didn't pierce through the conformal coating, just belt and braces and slightly OCD thing to do. I appreciate it is pointless if I have already measured it and seen a voltage on the meter 👍
Dear Vince, great videos. Stopped for a moment after B&O phone fix to comment. There is a rating on POTS (plain old telephone service) phones called the ringer current. Most digital phone interface devices provide a substantial lower ring current. If the phone requires higher ring current to function, it pulls down the ring voltage past the off-hook detect level. This in turn registers as a pickup, after which the current drain drops which immediately registers as a hangup. The only ways around this are to either use a different voip interface devices that provides higher ring current or add an external power source to the phone so it requires less ring current to function, since by default it is siphoning power from the ringing line.
Very interesting, that sounds like the exact thing that is happening. Maybe this is why every so often it rings. If it is borderline on the ring current then once it gets past the first ring it will keep on ringing. How fascinating, nice one Rob!!!!!!👍😎
@@Mymatevince From memory, BT used to refer to this as REN; Ringer Equivalence Number. BT would only support up to a total REN on any one phone line of 4. Each phone had a REN that was found in the documentation, maybe on the sticker or in the manual. Add up all the RENs of all connected phones and if it exceeds 4, don't expect BT to respond to a fault about ringing problems. I seem to recall (and this is a very vague recollection) some Cisco 2-port Analogue Telephone Adaptor stating that it could handle connected device(s) up to a REN of 1.3 per port. Looks like it says REN=1 on the sticker, and one would assume VM would have specified their hub to handle at least a REN of 1, but if either is not meeting specifications, seems a reasonable place to explore. I don't think you can use your multimeter to measure the ring current accurately; they're typically designed to measure 50/60Hz and the ring signal is half that and it's pulsed. An oscilloscope across the phone line of real line vs VM adaptor may be interesting as if the peaks on the VM adaptor are lower, that would tend to corroborate this as the problem. You can measure current with an oscilloscope with the assistance of a shunt resistor in series with the circuit. 1V on the scope measured across an 0.1ohm resistor =10A current. Beware a ringing phone line can hit 100V so no touchy the wires while testing, else the zap will tell you off!
@@iainthomas237 Thank you Iain👍👍👍
19:22 There are N64 controller extension cables available which can be used to replace the controller cable.
that water spill on the floor uff , anyway it was still a video worth enjoying thanks for this one good luck for future ones
Your sewing has improved a lot mate. Keep it up and you’ll make a right ol’ homemaker for some lucky lad. RESULT!
Hahahaha 👍
I actually prefer the longer vids with multiple items. The only criticism might be to add chapters for each item in the video itself.
the crackle when you plugged somthing into that water heater scared the living daylights out of me, but i think it was your multimeter dial XD
We have a smaller Nespresso machine. It works very well and gets daily use. However it will leak occasionally, sometimes the water container doesn’t seem to seat properly. Stick with it.
Fantastic content Vince, Loving the length of this one too!
Nice one Mike, it appears to be doing well. I thought I was going to get slated for the 2 hour+ length, but I think the incoming storm in the UK has done me a favour today with people staying in 😂
We have been blessed by the blue hoodie man love you vince
Hi Vince, first time commenting, but i have looked a few of your videos. It is really good to see, that there are still persons out there, who have the mentality to try to fix things. I personaly LOVE to fix things, because if it´s borken, then I can´t brake it anymore, it is already borken. Now when I as looking/listening you Nesspresso part, it sounded a lot like she (all machines have a female soul) can´t push the water throught the heater, hence the descaleing request from the machine and leaking clean water afterwards, because pump has the preassure up, but there is now where to go. Just my two cents. Keep up the fixing spirit.
I love your videos Vince keep up the good work 🎉
Ahhh Vince I’ve missed the long videos!! Thank you for that, I really enjoyed it! Take care, see you soon
Looking forward to watching this video Vince. I've been gutted that you hadn't uploaded anything for 3 weeks. Happy to see a new video, even more excited that it's 2 hours and 20 minutes long. Woo hoo. 😁
Thanks Rebecca 😎
1:18:50 Wow! You've got your extension fully wound on the drum? Brave man.
I spent much of the last 13 years working, amongst other thing, with postal franking machines that back in the earlier days rang up on a telephone line.
As customers began to move from (Norwegian) PTSN lines to VOIP we had huge problems with dropped calls (all outgoing) Over time I learned which VOIP adapters worked, which didn’t and which worked if we turned the modem settings down to their lowest possible settings of 2400 baud.
From what I could figure out much of it came down to the amount of current a device would draw as sometimes this overloaded a VOIP adapter. While an old BT line could support phones with a REN (Ring Equivalent Number) of (from memory) 4 in total, many VOIP systems fail before even reaching 1, so an older phone like that BnO one might simply overload the VOIP box when it calls in and had to drive the ring citcuits.
Thanks for the detailed info. Other comments also mentioned the same thing. When I get the phone back I think it would be good to see if it is possible to somehow weaken the ring to get it to work. It would be a bodge, but if a variable resistor or diode or something could be put into the circuit it might weaken it enough to work. Might make a good tea break fix. Thanks for sharing your knowledge 👍👍👍
@@Mymatevince I don't think this is anything to do with the phone not being "VOIP-aware". I would be very surprised if a B&O phone didn't comply with the BT SIN standard for connection to the PSTN. I'd be less surprised if a Sky router didn't provide enough ring current. If you can track down an old BT REN booster (I used to have one) that might confirm the situation. I see several posts on-line asking what REN the Sky router provides, but no published spec. See www.shop.bt.com/content/uni2/documentation/4kqv/bt-ren-booster.pdf
Resistors also overheat if they're receiving too much current so maybe worth investigating the ic they're connected to too 👍
While true, resistors still work by converting the energy. If you encase them in some well insulating glue, they'll eventually just cook themselves. Highly doubt anything else would cause them to fail in this case :)
52 mins in, thoroughly enjoying this :) that voip to old analog phone incompatibility stumps me too, i have never seen this! gonna get a refreshing drink, on with the show! :D
Epic blockbuster Mr Vince - Super entertaining thanks 🤓