Quoting Peter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> There's a definite blueish glow at that setting (in a totally dark
> room), but nothing that could be read.
yes, the electrodes are always hot, even at dimmest setting. You can
probably also make out some glow from the horizontal filaments.
Brightest sett
kdf wrote:
> Quoting peterw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
>
>
>> I told the support rep that I could barely read the text on the SB3 at
>> its most dim setting, he sounded surprised that I could read it at all
>> at that brightness. Not a good sign.
>>
>
> unless you consider that the dimmest settin
Quoting peterw <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I told the support rep that I could barely read the text on the SB3 at
> its most dim setting, he sounded surprised that I could read it at all
> at that brightness. Not a good sign.
unless you consider that the dimmest setting could be considered 0.
I'd b
Michael Herger;179181 Wrote:
> > Is this normal, or did I get an SB3 that's unusually dim?
>
> I think it's been mentioned that this was due to the additional
> filtering
> front (which makes the light blueish).
Darn. There have been times when daylight has made the SB3 difficult to
read. It'
> Is this normal, or did I get an SB3 that's unusually dim?
I think it's been mentioned that this was due to the additional filtering
front (which makes the light blueish).
--
Michael
-
http://www.herger.net/SlimCD - your SlimSe
I recently bought a Squeezebox V3 and was struck by how much less bright
the display is than the display on my yead-old Squeezebox2. The
brightest setting on the new Squeezebox V3 is about as bright as the
second-brightest setting of the Squeezebox2. And the dimmest setting of
the Squeezebox V3 th