Should be scissors idk where to find that specific performance of it but it’s scissors bc whenever they would play it they would bring a keg in the middle set it on fire and later on in the song Corey would give a speech and kinda freestyle
i had one second long black outs on my acer, followed by normal operation (no need to press button), first black outs were happening every three seconds, then even every single second. for now reducing brightness of monitor, via the inbuilt config menu, to 60 percent, allows me to avoid the black outs. at 70 percent i will get occasional black outs. its currently 32 degree celsius in my room. this temperature would have been okay before and its been just as hot for weeks. apparently the sensors of my monitor just got more heat sensitive? i tested that is all unrelated to the cable or computer. messed around with bios settings to no avail. black outs happen while i am in bios too. no software issue for sure. reducing the brightness of software display does not help at all. i looked into the monitor bottom socket which seems to host the electronics of my monitor but i kinda gave up half way, its metal boxes inside of metal boxes .. maybe another time ...
My 13 year old SAMSUNG S23B300B monitor was shutting itself off after being on for a while, and at times I could not turn it on again unless I unplug the external power brick and let everything cool down. It turned out that he monitors main control IC was over heating. The external 14 VDC power supply was working just fine. I put a home made heat-sink on the IC and that improved things a bit. I even drilled 128 holes in the back panel to allow air flow, and that improved things even more. LOL. I even changed some of the electrolytic capacitors, and that helped a bit as well, but still not enough. But I refused to give up. This monitor only cost me about $64.00 back 13 years ago and I did not want to pay today's ridiculous prices for a replacement. So by using two power diodes connected in series, I dropped the 14 VDC down to 12.6 VDC. Success ! The monitor was now as cool as a kitten and no more shut down of power up problems. It was a last resort fix, but if it gives my monitor a few more working years, then so be it. After that I only had to change the brightness setting from 56 to 66 to get back to the original brightness.