Geeky type question
Jul. 16th, 2005 08:06 pmDoes anyone know the voltage need to drive a "cold cathode" fluorescent lamp that is used as the backlight for an IBM Thinkpad laptop?
I have an old TP, of which the LCD screen is cracked and unusable. However, the backlight seems to be okay, and I thought it could be the beginning of a "light table", if I could find the voltage for the lamp.
scifox this should be right up your alley. :=3
I have an old TP, of which the LCD screen is cracked and unusable. However, the backlight seems to be okay, and I thought it could be the beginning of a "light table", if I could find the voltage for the lamp.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-17 12:52 am (UTC)Also, check your inverter, it may actually be marked.
Going to keep the base-unit? They can make handy little blind boxes for firewalls and house network servers.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-17 01:41 am (UTC)The part number of the lamp wil be printed on the glass somewhere. You Google up for that information, likely on the mfg's home page from there.
Remember, some of those things run on a pretty high voltage/low current AC power supply, so there can be a shock hazard there.
CYa!
Mako
no subject
Date: 2005-07-17 03:32 am (UTC)And honestly, I don't think an LCD backlight would be bright enough to form a good light table. A few cheap flourescent lights, some lumber and plexiglass will do far better and cover larger paper sizes.
no subject
Date: 2005-07-17 02:24 pm (UTC)