Display slanted ~30 degrees anti-clockwise after reassembling? - HTC Vox

Help! - does anyone know what causes the display to "slant" on a Vox?
I just put a new case on my wifes Vox, and now the image shown on the display is slanting about 30 degrees anti-clockwise - a bit like the horizontal hold is off, for those that remember CRT TVs. Just occasionally, it shows correctly for a second when the display first turns on, but then goes back to slanting. Other than the slant, the display looks perfectly OK. The exact same slat shows in horizontal mode with the keyboard open.
I've tried a cold boot just in case, but it's made no difference, and I've also reassembled the case again a couple of times which has also made no difference. When I did the swap, I didn't need to disconnect the screen assembly, but did disconnect the keyboard and number pad. I don't think these connections are bad, but if they are they were the same bad each time I reassembled.
Help! Her who must be obeyed is NOT going to be happy!

Weird - can you supply a photo?
One of the connectors is surely not fitting correctly. The big flat one has to "snap" in - you can hear it if you do it right. The one form the display itself has to be inserted rather deep in the slot - this can only be done if the "lock" flap has been released. You must have done this when you removed the old display.
What did you actually disassemble when swapping cases? Is it possible that you bent a flex-cable too much and have torn it apart? Maybe as well that the connector is no more straight in the slot.

tobbbie said:
Weird - can you supply a photo?
One of the connectors is surely not fitting correctly. The big flat one has to "snap" in - you can hear it if you do it right. The one form the display itself has to be inserted rather deep in the slot - this can only be done if the "lock" flap has been released. You must have done this when you removed the old display.
What did you actually disassemble when swapping cases? Is it possible that you bent a flex-cable too much and have torn it apart? Maybe as well that the connector is no more straight in the slot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks Tobbbie,
I did find that by twisting the case just so I could get the display to pop back to normal for a second or two, so I think it must be a bad connection or some dirt in one. I'll have another go at it tonight and see if I can get any further with the help of some compressed air and maybe some electric connector cleaner..
I never actually removed the cable from the display itself - I managed to get the screen and attached circuit boards transferred to the new case whilst still attached to each other.
Cheers,
G

Related

New LCD+digitizer problem

Hi,
I have just replaced LCD and digitizer of my HTC raph (first time) and there seems to be some kind of problem. It turns on, but the screen shows nothing just lights up a little bit and there are some stripes visible as if the lcd would be broken, but it's brand new. The stripes changes a bit as i press some buttons or touch the screen so the phone and touchscreen are working - the problem is with LCD.
I don't know if i put all the conducting tape to the places it originaly was. Could that be a problem? I double checked all the connections but still, might be a contacts problem?
Any thoughts on what might cause this?
Also the phone got kind of hot after having it charged for some time, is that normal?
Of course, this may be caused by a bad connection (but rather hard to go wrong slot), but at a distance hard to say something more concrete.
Best to check with the new flex.
Thank you for the answer, i will try changing the main flex.
The flex cables can touch eachother right? Since they're originally covered with conductive tape.
BTW, i also intend to change the lcd + digitizer... my question is:
how to apply the digitzier? lcd and digitizer came separated - do i have to solder/glue or whatever the flex (of lcd & digi.)?
The original was something like sticked together... reminds me on sellotape aka Scotch Tape.
Can you give me a some help?
thanks
The ribbons must be solded together, there's 4 contacts on them and they should not touch eachother.

Replace cracked screen, now screen just glows?

Hi. My HTC Inspire had a cracked screen so I bought a digitizer replacement, and the disassemble/install/reassemble seemed to go ok. But after doing so I turn on the phone, it makes the little vibrate as it starts and then the screen comes on but as a low glow and doesn't go past that. Don't know if the phone is booting all the way or not, just see the glowing screen.
Did I screw something up or is there something I can do to get past that?
I've done a soft boot, the battery was removed for an hour while I was replacing the screen, the SIM card is firmly set, etc.
Thanks for any help!
Well, the phone was sitting here "on" (still only with light glow) and I heard text messages coming over and the little green light is now flashing so the phone is up and running apparently, the screen just isn't showing. But it's has the light glow, is it possible the new screen isn't all the way set in place even though it has the "glow"?
Thanks!
hominid4 said:
Well, the phone was sitting here "on" (still only with light glow) and I heard text messages coming over and the little green light is now flashing so the phone is up and running apparently, the screen just isn't showing. But it's has the light glow, is it possible the new screen isn't all the way set in place even though it has the "glow"?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds like the screen is getting power but one of the wires is not put back completely. Made be you reversed the wires when you reattached them
Thanks a bunch for the reply. When attaching the glass to the LDC there's the little thin ribbon that inserts into the little white plastic clip, and then the wider ribbon part that slides up the side slot and snaps into place on the other side. Besides those two, would there be other wires I should look at? Those two look nice and secure.
Thanks again!
hominid4 said:
Thanks a bunch for the reply. When attaching the glass to the LDC there's the little thin ribbon that inserts into the little white plastic clip, and then the wider ribbon part that slides up the side slot and snaps into place on the other side. Besides those two, would there be other wires I should look at? Those two look nice and secure.
Thanks again!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have not taken mine apart yet but I walked a buddy threw it over the phone. Are you sure the cables are plugged into the right connectors? I think he also mention 2 plug in plugs that needed to be attached as well. What I would personally do. Is take it back apart and make sure everything is cool. Making sure the ribbons are not pinched or messed up and making sure all connectors are connected firmly.
Yes everything is plugged into the correct place, actually only fit in specific areas. I've just finished taken the phone apart for the 5th time and the ribbons are all flat, not kinks, seated fully, etc. I'm starting to wonder if the screen I got is faulty. I'll keep piddling with it.
Thanks.

Verizon Galaxy S III (i535) Display colors wrong after glass replacement

To make a long story short, my wife dropped her Samsung Galaxy S3 i535 phone a couple weeks ago and shattered the front glass. I ordered the replacement glass on eBay and proceeded to get it installed this past week.
One of the things I noticed was that none of the repair videos adequately documented how to route and attach the button for the home keys at the bottom of the screen. I was finally able to get the old home button ribbon cable detached from the phone and pulled free from its location. I noticed that there was still quite a bit of adhesive left on the resting location for the home key pc board (located a few mm in front of the ribbon cable that connects to the lcd assembly.)
I made the mistake of thinking that the adhesive consisted of some form of double sided tape, so using a small blade and a pair of forceps I began removing the adhesive. Turns out, the adhesive was attached to a felt-like material that was covering the back of the LCD. Once removed, I noticed that the section of the screen from which the felt had been removed was slightly discolored.
I proceeded to reassemble the phone with the new glass, and it is working correctly, with one exception:
The entire screen (not just the area where the felt was removed) appears to have a greenish tint to it. This is most notable when booting the phone. The SAMSUNG logo appears as almost a neon green (My wife assures me this should be white) and the booting animation is mostly green (She assures me it was multicolored)
A couple of questions here:
Did the piece of material I removed from the back of the LCD cause this problem, or should I be looking at something else for a solution?
Is there any chance this felt-like material contained the backlighting for the LCD Screen?
If not, could just a small section of missing felt allow enough light to escape to discolor the entire screen?
Also, since I obviously can't replace the felt, would coating the expose area with some form of paint or something work to restore the proper coloring to the phone?
I am currently looking at other replacement lcd assemblies which, from what I can tell, simply involve moving the motherboard from the old phone into the new assembly, connecting it, then putting the back cover onto the phone. If I can afford spending the $100-150 that these cost, I would like to avoid it. If this is my only suitable solution at this time, I would like a definitive answer so that I can make the purchase and get her phone back to working order.
Thank You all for taking the time to read my post, I can post pictures later to elaborate on what I am describing, but my wife and I are both at work at the moment and I don't currently have her phone to take a photo of.
Pictures would be nice. However your back light shouldn't discolor your screen. My guess is you loosed a cable or something else causing the screen to discolor.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
screwyluie said:
Pictures would be nice. However your back light shouldn't discolor your screen. My guess is you loosed a cable or something else causing the screen to discolor.
Sent from my SCH-I535 using Tapatalk 2
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I will get pictures posted this afternoon. After taking a little more time to look at it earlier today, it appears that Green and Blue colors are working, I just haven't got any red.
Do you know where to find a diagram of what ribbon connectors control what aspect of the phone?
Pictures
A little late, but here are the pictures of my wife's Galaxy S III (i535)
http://goo.gl/TnXkFC
that will give you an idea of the connector for the screen. you say all you did was replace the glass? not the whole screen? I cant imagine how this would happen unless you damaged the ribbon cable when removing the glass.
unless you want to remove the glass again you'll have to take it apart from the rear, which isn't too hard really. take the back cover off, then remove all the little screws you see. that piece of plastic will come off and this is what you'll get: http://imgur.com/WwoOgMP
the red box is the connector, make sure it's seated. i'm not sure you can get all the way to the digitizer panel from the rear, but this is simple enough it's worth trying before removing the glass again.
also there are plenty of youtube videos on how to teardown the sgs3.
on a side note, task killers are bad for your phone.... use Greenify instead, or nothing at all.
(located a few mm in front of the ribbon cable that connects to the lcd assembly.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If this ribbon cable that connects to the LCD was damaged, it might be your problem.
In that case, you will need another LCD.
It's best to buy the LCD and Glass as one piece.
About $120 or more.

[Q] N5 Random Shut Downs After Screen Replacement

So I ended up cracking my screen and installed a replacement last night. Everything seemed fine but I noticed, after putting it back together, that any slight bit of pressure or shock to the top causes my N5 to shut off.
I took it apart again to make sure all of the ribbons were properly connected and to take a second look and everything appears fine. I didn't have this problem prior to the replacement and I was very gentle during the tear down and reassembly so I don't the the CPU or anything on it is damaged. Other than the top being hyper sensitive the phone works perfectly.
Any ideas on what the problem is or could be?
SOLVED(sorry, I don't know how to change the title)
I just wanted to fill in anyone curious or running into this problem in the future on how I resolved the issue.
So after some time I narrowed the problem down to the second back cover (the one with the camera lens and beneath the Nexus branded cover) making contact with the motherboard. More specifically, compressing the power management IC with its aluminum cover. You want to make sure that chip is laid flush which was a PITA, for me at least, because the headphone jack and earpiece speaker wants to push it up and out. What I did was put the jack in, lay the board on top, then gradually adjusted the jack with tweezers while gently pushing the motherboard down until the board was flush, then placing the earpiece speaker in.
I then placed the second back cover on and tightened the screws until I could feel them just slightly putting pressure on the cover. I can't stress how light this pressure is as it is the key in resolving this issue. To compare it to changing your oil filter on your car; when you can feel the filter make solid contact with the block and you then turn it about another half turn to seal it; it's like that but without that half turn.
Anyway, I hope this helps anyone else unfortunate enough to both break their screen and then have their phone randomly shut down when any pressure is applied after fixing it.
hello
TCGUK said:
So I ended up cracking my screen and installed a replacement last night. Everything seemed fine but I noticed, after putting it back together, that any slight bit of pressure or shock to the top causes my N5 to shut off.
I took it apart again to make sure all of the ribbons were properly connected and to take a second look and everything appears fine. I didn't have this problem prior to the replacement and I was very gentle during the tear down and reassembly so I don't the the CPU or anything on it is damaged. Other than the top being hyper sensitive the phone works perfectly.
Any ideas on what the problem is or could be?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hello where didu buy the screen for your new n5 ? there is any king of intrusion to do it .
thank:good:
josedecuba said:
hello where didu buy the screen for your new n5 ? there is any king of intrusion to do it .
thank:good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I bought mine off of eBay and it cost me $150. I could be wrong but it looked like the screen can't be separated from the frame. You might want to keep that in mind when purchasing because there are sellers that sell the screen without a frame. Tearing down the N5 was pretty simple. The hardest part for me was getting the back cover off as there are 4 (two on each side) large clips. If you end up bending the clips any, you can push them back to shape to keep the back from creaking like every Samsung I've ever owned. There's a nice guide on iFixit if you want to look at the process prior to ordering a new part.
I've read from others that you can send your phone into LG and they'll repair the screen for you. When you send it in they'll email a quote to you within a day. The price I keep seeing is $146 and I have no idea what the turn around on that is.

[Q] Broken touchscreen, wacky random digitizer.

I'm sad to say I finally destroyed my TF300. It fell from about 6 feet onto tile. The screen is cracked in quite a few places, but luckily it didn't spiderweb. The touchscreen kind of works, I say kind of, because it's touching in random places all over the screen. So my question is, can I possibly unplug the digitizer only since the LCD works fine? That way I can use the keyboard dock's mouse or a USB mouse and still use the device. Thanks in advance for any help.
this happened to me as well. On youtube there are many tutorials of how to replace the screen..
they will show you how to take the back casing off
then you can just unplug the digitizer cable (its the yellow cable with two connections on the bottom right of the back of the tablet) this will disable the touch but if you go that far you might as well replace the whole screen you can get online for $50.
and make sure to take note of the digitizer revision number as asus makes 4 different types and only the one will work on your tablet when you want to fix it...its a number on the digitizer cable either g01 g02 g03 or one other i cant remember off the top of my head
schkeet said:
this happened to me as well. On youtube there are many tutorials of how to replace the screen..
they will show you how to take the back casing off
then you can just unplug the digitizer cable (its the yellow cable with two connections on the bottom right of the back of the tablet) this will disable the touch but if you go that far you might as well replace the whole screen you can get online for $50.
and make sure to take note of the digitizer revision number as asus makes 4 different types and only the one will work on your tablet when you want to fix it...its a number on the digitizer cable either g01 g02 g03 or one other i cant remember off the top of my head
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, I meant that I didn't want to fix the display, just disable the digitizer so that I can continue to use the device via HDMI. If I unplug the digitizer, will the LCD still work?
After unplugging the ribbon cable for the digitizer, most of the random touches have stopped. But now, even using the built in touchpad or a USB mouse, touches do not hold and can cause random presses to occur in various parts of the screen. Any ideas?
I'm not sure but could be a different problem? I've done the same to mine and my keyboard dock works just fine
savergn said:
After unplugging the ribbon cable for the digitizer, most of the random touches have stopped. But now, even using the built in touchpad or a USB mouse, touches do not hold and can cause random presses to occur in various parts of the screen. Any ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Spontaneous presses? This is at random, some tabs have it, others don't. That ain't from the keyboard; rather from either the digitizer, though detached it might be, or the TS board, or both in close proximity with one another. I've experienced this and still have no idea why. I've had perfectly good dig and TS Board do it when the board is left dangling and not screwed down to the magnesium frame. The only way to stop is to replace the digitizer. Or you can try to yank the dig's ribbons off the glass, as I've noticed ghost touches produced by a dig with partially torn ribbons (on the glass side) that were still connected to the PCB. The dig is not repairable anyways. You're risking nothing.
graphdarnell said:
Spontaneous presses? This is at random, some tabs have it, others don't. That ain't from the keyboard; rather from either the digitizer, though detached it might be, or the TS board, or both in close proximity with one another. I've experienced this and still have no idea why. I've had perfectly good dig and TS Board do it when the board is left dangling and not screwed down to the magnesium frame. The only way to stop is to replace the digitizer. Or you can try to yank the dig's ribbons off the glass, as I've noticed ghost touches produced by a dig with partially torn ribbons (on the glass side) that were still connected to the PCB. The dig is not repairable anyways. You're risking nothing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you possibly have any photos or tutorials that might be able to help me out so I don't cause anymore damage to the tablet?
savergn said:
Do you possibly have any photos or tutorials that might be able to help me out so I don't cause anymore damage to the tablet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not sure where to start. If you've taken apart the thing before, i'd be easier. Remove the back. Turn off the service switch (Important). Otherwise, you might burn a coil on the motherboard. If you don't know what that is, look at the top of the motherboard. To the left of the power switch (thin amber ribbon for power on top side and volume on right side), there's a switch mounted on the other side but accessible from the top of the board. You'll see the printing "off" and "on" on this side. Slide it to "off" position. (Thumb attached shows location of switch at top, and where the ribbons should be cut off at bottom).
The ribbon part that's taped to the glass is hidden under the lcd. If you don't care, just snip it off where it meets the lcd edge. There's really no need to remove the lcd if you're not intent on replacing the digitizer. Again, since I am not certain what caused the ghost touches in your cases, it's possible they will continue. Hopefully, they won't. But at this point, the digitizer serves no function other than protecting the lcd surface on the outside. No need to save the ribbons.
To tell you the truth, I've tried using the tab with a dock and no touchscreen. You can live with it, but it's enormous inconvenience any way you use the device, from recoveries to roms to any app within. It's just not designed to be user-friendly that way. I eventually gave up and replaced the digitizer. You can find one for around $35.00 these days.
graphdarnell said:
Not sure where to start. If you've taken apart the thing before, i'd be easier. Remove the back. Turn off the service switch (Important). Otherwise, you might burn a coil on the motherboard. If you don't know what that is, look at the top of the motherboard. To the left of the power switch (thin amber ribbon for power on top side and volume on right side), there's a switch mounted on the other side but accessible from the top of the board. You'll see the printing "off" and "on" on this side. Slide it to "off" position. (Thumb attached shows location of switch at top, and where the ribbons should be cut off at bottom).
The ribbon part that's taped to the glass is hidden under the lcd. If you don't care, just snip it off where it meets the lcd edge. There's really no need to remove the lcd if you're not intent on replacing the digitizer. Again, since I am not certain what caused the ghost touches in your cases, it's possible they will continue. Hopefully, they won't. But at this point, the digitizer serves no function other than protecting the lcd surface on the outside. No need to save the ribbons.
To tell you the truth, I've tried using the tab with a dock and no touchscreen. You can live with it, but it's enormous inconvenience any way you use the device, from recoveries to roms to any app within. It's just not designed to be user-friendly that way. I eventually gave up and replaced the digitizer. You can find one for around $35.00 these days.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you very much for the information.
I don't plan on using it as a daily device, I just picked up my Note 3 the other day, and using the TF300 is going to feel like going back to the stone age. I really just wanted it to have basic functionality, because I still have the HDMI cable for it, and have XBMC and VLC installed on it, so I can play videos easily on my TV. It has Cyanogenmod on it right now, so really, it should be fine for a while. I could probably also hook up my dualshock 3 to it and game on a TV. Portable low-end console. I'll update the thread later if whenever I get around to cutting the ribbon cable. Thanks again.

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