Main Page: Difference between revisions
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* [[Glossary]] - explanations of all the technical terms used in this wiki (and some more). | * [[Glossary]] - explanations of all the technical terms used in this wiki (and some more). | ||
==Repairing with others== | ===Repairing with others=== | ||
* Thinking of running your own Restart Party? [http://therestartproject.org/restartparty/ All you need] is here. | * Thinking of running your own Restart Party? [http://therestartproject.org/restartparty/ All you need] is here. | ||
* [[Tools]] - Building a toolkit for community repair events. | * [[Tools]] - Building a toolkit for community repair events. |
Revision as of 21:49, 29 August 2019
Welcome to the Restart Wiki!
What it isn't: It isn't going to show you how to fix a particular make and model of device, which we leave to the various fix-it sites and many disassembly videos. You can also get help with a device on social media using #SOSRestart. Here, we concentrate on basic and widely applicable principles.
Who it's for: It's aimed at anyone with a curiosity about how things work and how to fix them. No prior knowledge is assumed. In the spirit of sharing knowledge as widely as possible, everyone is welcome to read it. To contribute, just become a volunteer Restarter in your community and contact us.
Like any wiki, this one is work-in-progress. Pages referenced below in red don't yet exist but are projected.
If you wish to reuse anything here, you are welcome do so under the terms of the Creative Commons ShareAlike Licence 3.0.
To find out more about the work we do, and our vision of changing the world's relationship with electronics, please visit us at The Restart Project homepage.
General Topics
- Scared to Repair? Some useful tips for complete beginners.
- How to search - Tips on how to search for useful material.
- Resources - Good sites for fixit or disassemble guides, service manuals etc.
- Diagnosing faults - Common processes for troubleshooting
- Case Studies - Our favourite Famous Fixes in which we learned something new, or which nicely demonstrated a diagnostic or fixing principle.
- Finding a reliable professional - best practices and some London examples.
Glossary of Terms
- Glossary - explanations of all the technical terms used in this wiki (and some more).
Repairing with others
- Thinking of running your own Restart Party? All you need is here.
- Tools - Building a toolkit for community repair events.
- Restarter Safety Guidelines - Safety instructions to be adhered to at all Restart Parties.
- Measuring impact
Techniques, Skills and Tools
Some really basic skills
- How to wire a mains plug - this step by step guide shows you simply and with pictures.
- How to drive screws like a pro - Using a screwdriver is easy but using it properly may not be obvious.
- Types of screw head and screwdriver - Recognise even the more unusual types of screw so you can use the right screwdriver.
- Rescuing Damaged Screws - What to do if the screw head is damaged.
- How to use a multimeter - the most useful addition to your toolbox after screwdrivers etc.
- Magnifiers and Inspection Aids - You can't fix what you can't see. How to see better.
Soldering skills
- A Guide to Soldering from Kitronic is a complete guide to the art, including video demonstrations.
- How to solder is a more light-hearted and amusing but nevertheless informative resource from Technology Will Save Us. (You don't need an expensive soldering iron though - it just makes it a little bit easier.)
- Surface mount soldering - What you can do and how to do it by supplementing the tools you probably already have with a few inexpensive extras.
Fixing skills
- Connectors - Various different types you will meet, and how to disconnect and reconnect them.
- Connecting and joining wires - different methods for different situations.
- Sticky Stuff - How to stick things back together when they break.
Staying safe
- PAT testing survival guide.
- Personal Protective Equipment - keeping yourself safe.
- Electrostatic Discharge Precautions - how not to fry your gadgets with static.
Understanding how stuff works (or doesn't)
A Restarters' Training Session makes an easy introduction to the following sections down to and including Electronic Components. It consists of a presentation with audio commentary, lasting around 50 minutes.
- Electric circuits, volts amps watts and ohms - what every Restarter should know.
- AC and DC - what's the deal?
- Electronic components - recognition, failure modes and testing:
- Basic electronic components - Resistors, capacitors, inductors and transformers, and quartz crystals.
- Active components - Diodes and rectifiers, transistors, and integrated circuits (ICs).
- Passive components - Switches, push-buttons and connectors.
- Protection components - Various devices for over-voltage and over-current protection. Fuses are only the beginning!
- Batteries - different types, shapes and sizes, what they're good for, how to buy them, use them and dispose of them.
- Electric motors - different types, how to recognise them, test them and maybe fix them.
- Power supplies - how they work, what can go wrong, and how to test and fix them.
- How radios work - basic theory to help you understand what might be wrong when you can't see it with your own eyes.
Learn About Electronics is an excellent site if you'd like a different view of the basics, or if you'd like to go deeper.
Computers and home office
Software
- How to deal with a slow laptop - mainly focussed on Windows.
- Windows miscellaneous.
- Be Your Own Security Expert - helping people stay secure.
- How to speed up a slow OS X computer.
- Apple miscellaneous including OS X and Macs.
- Linux migration - Choosing a distro, and throwing Windows out of computers.
- CD/USB bootable tools - many of them applicable whatever your operating system.
- Disk Wipe Utilities - How to securely erase all sensitive data from an old computer, and why you should never skip doing so.
- UEFI and GPT - Making sense of UEFI, which supercedes the BIOS in all computers since around 2011, and the GPT disk structure which goes with it.
Computer Hardware
- Yes, you can fix your laptop!
- Laptop power problems.
- Clean up! Cool down! - dealing with dust build-up and overheating in laptop and desktop computers.
- Advanced hard disk tools - and the simpler ones too. Where to turn when the data is in danger.
- SSD Migration and Troubleshooting - Solid State Disks: everything you might need to know.
Peripherals
- Troubleshooting inkjet printers.
- Data Projectors.
Electronic gadgets
How to extend the life of a device used mostly for web-browsing through browser choice.
Feature phones
Smartphones (except Apple)
- Android Tips and Tricks
- Installing a Custom ROM may enable you to extend the useful life of your phone or tablet.
iPods, iPhones, iPads
- Summary of iPhone, iPad and iPod repairs.
- Using an alternative to iOS to save an older device
Headphones
- How to mend Headphones
Cameras
Home entertainment
Household and Kitchen items
- Carbon-based gadgets - all you need to know. (Just for fun!)
- Digital weighing scales - how they work and what might go wrong.
- Kettles and Electric Urns - how they work and the possibilities for fixing.
- Microwave Ovens (This page contains IMPORTANT SAFETY WARNINGS.)
- Mixers, blenders and coffee grinders.
- Sewing machines demystified. Trouble-shooting, care and maintenance.
- Steam Irons.
- Table lamps, desk lamps and floor-standing lamps.
- Toasters.
- Vacuum cleaners.