To go back to the one I fixed:
This was the picture I meant Etienne:

I also noticed a nice hint that Béla wrote on his thread about this on KLOV forum:
Switched off the machine, disconnected that plug, cleaned the F700 fuse under it and when I turned it on again, there was just a vertical thin green line in the middle of the monitor for 10 sec, than nothing.My theory:
Corrosion is usually not so much a problem because....the stuff that corrodes is in the open air. So f.i. for a fuse, the holder and the fuse caps may have corrosion but as long as you leave it as it is (and it works) there's no problem because there is no corrosion between the metal where the holder and the fuse touch each other.
BUT....when you take out the fuse, and put it back turned around a bit, the corrosion will now be between the holder and the fuse
Pretty sure that this is what has happened

However, it was good to replace them anyway.
While we're on this subject: there were other parts like transistors and diodes that showed some corrosion on the leads too. But as long as they are in their original soldered spots there's no problem.
At one point I noticed (by feeling, carefully bending) that one of the small transistors was not "fixed" like it should. By just moving it around a couple of times one of the leads broke.
So I removed the old solderings and put the transistor all the way down to the board (I hate it how they kept the leads so long on the 6100's, another quality issue). However, once I did this I could not solder back the transistor legs anymore. The solder would not "grab" on the leads.....the reason was the corrosion on the legs.
Just one solution: new transistor

SO......corrosion is definitly something to keep an eye on...I haven't seen it much on PCBs but this one obviously has been in a moist surrounding for quite some time...