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About Henry A. McKelvey
Expertise
I have worked in the Electronics field for 25 years, and have been a Telecommunications Expert for 20 years. My Expertise has been in: Video, Audio, RF, Television, and Stereo. I have been in the Television repair business for 25 years and have repaired over 20,000 Televisions in that time. I was a manager of an Information Technology Training Team at The Verizon Advanced Services Group Center, and a Distinguished Member of Technical Staff at Verizon Laboratories. I am now working full time in the TV repair industry until I can find another full time job, I know what your question is: "why don't you just work full time in the TV repair industry permanently?" Well the answer to that is simple, due to the complexity and the DIY craze, TV repair work is at best a good way to make extra money, not to rely on it for your livelihood. A sad truth, but a truth nonetheless.

Experience
25 years as an Electronics Repair Technician, 20 years as a Telecommunications Expert, and I love Electronics.

Organizations
The Society of Broadcast Engineers (SBE) The International Society of Certified Electronics Technicians (ISCET)

Publications
On-Line: http://www.fixya.com/users/shuttle83 (solutions to repair issues)
US Patent and Trade Office: (Copy and paste the link below)
http://appft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=0&f=S&l=50&TERM1=McKelvey&FIELD1=&co1=AND&TERM2=Verizon&FIELD2=&d=PG01

Education/Credentials
University of Phoenix (MSCIS working on) University of Phoenix (BSIT 2006) World College CIE (BTEE 2006) Cleveland Institute of Technology (ASEE 2006) National Education Center (Diploma in Commputer and Network Technology 1989) TESST Electronics School (Diploma in Electronics Engineering Technology 1985) AG Bell Vocational High School (Diploma in Electronics Repair (Radio and Television Repair 1983)

Awards and Honors
Society of Broadcast Engineers Membership (July 2006) Special Technology Achievement & Recognition Award (STAR Award) August 2004 (ISO 9000 Certification VTO-SIT) CWNP Certified Wireless Network Administrator (June 2004) Special Technology Achievement & Recognition Award (STAR Award) September 2003 (MSN Project) Special Technology Achievement & Recognition Award (STAR Award) November 2003 (Client CD and Registration Server Issue) Network Management Certification (ICCP)(2002) Data Communications Engineer Certification (Global Knowledge)(2002) TCP/IP Network Analyst Certification (ICCP) (2002) Winners Circle Award for Development of the DNOC Provisional training Team (2001) FCC License General Radiotelephone without endorsement (1985) FCC License General Radiotelephone with shipboard RADAR endorsement (1985) Certified Electronics Technician Certificate (Electronic Communications)(1989) Certified Electronics Technician Certificate (Consumer Electronics)(1985) 6 Patent Applications on file (do google search on "Henry A. McKelvey")

Past/Present Clients
See http://www.fixya.com/users/shuttle83
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rlz=1T4DMUS_enUS243US243&q=%22Henry+A.+McKelvey%22+TV+Repair&aq=f&oq=&aqi=


 
   

You are here:  Experts > Home/Garden > Home Appliances > TV/VCR/Stereo Troubleshooting > What TV for a cold garage?

TV/VCR/Stereo Troubleshooting - What TV for a cold garage?


Expert: Henry A. McKelvey - 7/2/2009

Question
I want a flat screen for my garage, temp range from 0-100 degrees.  I looked into projectors, which would be fine,and the only thing i found wrong is the picture quality when the garage is open.  Which flat screen can withstand the cold of zero degrees safely if any?

Answer
Hello DannyJ,

You are not going to like this answer, but it is strange. If this were dry cold the TV would love it until you generated static electricity and fried the TVs more sensitive parts. If this were moist cold the TV would love it until condensation shorts out the TV's internal components. That's your situation, finding the point between the dry cold and the moist cold.

When any LCD TV is used at low temperature of 10°C (50°F) or lower, response time and brightness are affected in such a way that the proper display may not be obtained.

I hope this helps,

Thank you,

Henry A. McKelvey - CBT, CET, CWNA

http://www.electron-age-technologies-llc.com

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