daver2
10k Member
Not sure.
Try it and see what you get.
If you start off with a stable screen and you get the 'screen jitters' when it warms up - then yes you can do it this way.
We are looking for the jitters to go away after you freeze one specific chip; and then it coming back as the machine warms up again. But, of course, it will take it longer to warm up from -20 or -30 degrees than room temperature. After the 'jitters' have come back, you freeze the ONE device and they should go away again. If so, then you need to look around the identified device and/or replace it.
Dave
Try it and see what you get.
If you start off with a stable screen and you get the 'screen jitters' when it warms up - then yes you can do it this way.
We are looking for the jitters to go away after you freeze one specific chip; and then it coming back as the machine warms up again. But, of course, it will take it longer to warm up from -20 or -30 degrees than room temperature. After the 'jitters' have come back, you freeze the ONE device and they should go away again. If so, then you need to look around the identified device and/or replace it.
Dave