Quadrajet1 wrote: > Bad flybacks don't cause a single line problem, that's usually a bad HOT >circuit problem. The flyback _is_ the horizontal output transformer, as well as the high voltage transformer. A failure in the flyback like an intermittent open in the secondary will produce a vertical line display. Most horizontal output circuit failures result in no drive to the flyback, which eliminates the high voltage, and therefore no display is visible. In the case described, where the failed display was a single _horizontal_ line, that indicates a failure in the vertical drive circuits, not the flyback, though vertical output circuits may be near enough to where the OP was spraying that it was affected by the spray and "fixed" the problem for a while. When you see a raster that is shrunken or a line, remember that the dimension that is normal is the stage that is working, and the shrunken dimension is the stage with the failure. In many monitors, the vertical output stage is partially powered by "boost" voltage generated by the horizontal output stage, so anything that hurts the boost will also deprive the vertical stage of proper power. Conversely, if the vertical stage has a fault that increases the load on the boost power, the horizontal stage and the HV may be dimished, as well. If the raster becomes slightly dimmer and larger, often fuzzier, particularly as brightness in increased ("blooming"), it means that the HV is low, since a lower HV makes a slower and more easily deflected electron beam. Since it is no longer economic to repair most TVs or monitors, the skills to diagnose their problems are becoming rarer. ;-( -michael Check out amazing quality sound for 8-bit Apples on my Home page: http://members.aol.com/MJMahon/