I did just that Friday with my product scanner after it locked me out when I tried to login. HQ fixed it but I still couldn’t get past the first screen. Boss said just put it aside and go on. When I got to a stop where the customer had not arrived yet I took a few moments to see if I could do something with it. Success!
I recently had trouble with my washing machine. It wouldn’t drain, rinse or spin. It turned out the problem was the lid switch. So, I could’ve replaced it, the switch and its wiring harness, taking a good two hours of work, or I could just use the wire cutters. After twisting the hot wires together, presto, the machine works just fine, minus the cutoff during the spin cycle, which I never use, anyway.
As a Navy electrician we called it PFM. I took it apart & put it back together & now it works. In tech terms, you got the connections tight & knocked out the crud.
Yakety Sax over 2 years ago
I did just that Friday with my product scanner after it locked me out when I tried to login. HQ fixed it but I still couldn’t get past the first screen. Boss said just put it aside and go on. When I got to a stop where the customer had not arrived yet I took a few moments to see if I could do something with it. Success!
jmworacle over 2 years ago
Like when my sister can’t get a signal with her satellite and she asks me to fix it. I have no idea what I’m doing but I fix it.
Dani Rice over 2 years ago
Adjust it gently with a hammer.
preacherman Premium Member over 2 years ago
I recently had trouble with my washing machine. It wouldn’t drain, rinse or spin. It turned out the problem was the lid switch. So, I could’ve replaced it, the switch and its wiring harness, taking a good two hours of work, or I could just use the wire cutters. After twisting the hot wires together, presto, the machine works just fine, minus the cutoff during the spin cycle, which I never use, anyway.
mourdac Premium Member over 2 years ago
We don’t need no stinking instructions (creed of the IT worker and men).
ChukLitl Premium Member over 2 years ago
As a Navy electrician we called it PFM. I took it apart & put it back together & now it works. In tech terms, you got the connections tight & knocked out the crud.