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>>>>> "rt" == Tibbetts, Ric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

    rt> You mentioned a 2.4ghz phone. Try moving the base station
    rt> further away.  Or.. if the cord is long enough, pick up the
    rt> base station, and walk around the room with it. See if it
    rt> effects the monitor quiver.

I'll give it a try.  Or even just pull the plug on it and all the
remote handsets.  The phone *is* new, we bought it when we moved it,
so it could be the source of the problem.

    rt> It really sounds like an EM problem. What's on the other side
    rt> of the wall? Are there ANY electric motors, around? Anything
    rt> that could be emitting EM interference?

Pantry.  Uhm, sewer pipe from upstairs toilet but there's no
correlation with flushing 8-)

    [...]
    rt> There is SOMETHING in the room, or possibly on the other side
    rt> of the wall that's creating an EM field, and screwing with
    rt> your monitor(s).

I agree, it makes sense.  That's why I was ready to wrap the thing in
aluminum foil and ground the foil.  Stick the monitor in a Faraday
cage and it *better* stop quivering.  The 2.4 GHz cordless (of the
multihandset variety) never occured to me, but it sounds like it might
fit the bill.

roland
- -- 
                       PGP Key ID: 66 BC 3B CD
Roland B. Roberts, PhD                             RL Enterprises
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                            6818 Madeline Court
[EMAIL PROTECTED]                           Brooklyn, NY 11220

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