Nehemiah
Mechanical
- Mar 7, 2003
- 17
At the company that I work for, we have several cards that go bad routinely. It costs us anywhere from $2k to $10k to have repaired. These are fixed prices independent of the what is broken. I know these are standard practices regardless of the industry, but I would like to try and do the repairs inhouse if possible.
First, does anyone have any experience to tell me if it is typically a good idea to try and do in house, component level repairs?
Second, I have done some looking and found that since I was trained in electronics troubleshooting and repair that they have lots of software that looks like it would help. Some of the software allows you enter in a wiring schematic and it will turn out a simplified schematic and you can do simulations to aid you in trouble shooting. Does anyone know if they have software that will allow you to do enter in your faulty readings and it will suggest faulty components or do you still have to do this by hand?
Thank you for any input on this.
First, does anyone have any experience to tell me if it is typically a good idea to try and do in house, component level repairs?
Second, I have done some looking and found that since I was trained in electronics troubleshooting and repair that they have lots of software that looks like it would help. Some of the software allows you enter in a wiring schematic and it will turn out a simplified schematic and you can do simulations to aid you in trouble shooting. Does anyone know if they have software that will allow you to do enter in your faulty readings and it will suggest faulty components or do you still have to do this by hand?
Thank you for any input on this.