- help please..
- Posted by phoenix on November 12th, 2006
The LCD(TFT) display on my A31 IBM ThinkPad seems to have given up on
me..the dispaly fickered a couple of times and now i cannot see
anyhting, except if I tilted the screen and shone light on it, then I
could barely see the screen, so I figure this could be something to do
with the brightness/transistors that aid brightness of a dispaly unit.
IBM does not repair these and its past warranty? any ideas...?
- Posted by Bigguy on November 12th, 2006
It sounds like the LCD backlight or the inverter that powers the backlight
has died.... it is repairable.
Guy
phoenix wrote:
- Posted by Bigguy on November 12th, 2006
It sounds like the LCD backlight or the inverter that powers the backlight
has died.... it is repairable.
Guy
phoenix wrote:
- Posted by Barry Watzman on November 12th, 2006
You either have a bad inverter or a bad lamp (the inverter is more
likely the problem). The inverter is a separate board inside the LCD
lid with the display panel (but not part of the display panel).
Replacing the inverter is fairly easy and relatively inexpensive (you
can usually get an inverter on E-Bay for $15 to $30; it will likely cost
more from IBM, but it's likely still less than $100). The lamp is a
fluorescent tube that is physically located inside the LCD panel, but
it's separately replaceable without replacing the entire panel (the
degree of difficulty of this varies widely, from trivial to almost
impossible). Lamp replacement can cost from about $15 to about $150,
depending on how you have it done.
In both cases, the biggest problem is finding the part. From your
description, the LCD panel itself is likely not defective. The inverter
is more likely the problem than the lamp, but either could cause this.
phoenix wrote:
- Posted by Barry Watzman on November 12th, 2006
You either have a bad inverter or a bad lamp (the inverter is more
likely the problem). The inverter is a separate board inside the LCD
lid with the display panel (but not part of the display panel).
Replacing the inverter is fairly easy and relatively inexpensive (you
can usually get an inverter on E-Bay for $15 to $30; it will likely cost
more from IBM, but it's likely still less than $100). The lamp is a
fluorescent tube that is physically located inside the LCD panel, but
it's separately replaceable without replacing the entire panel (the
degree of difficulty of this varies widely, from trivial to almost
impossible). Lamp replacement can cost from about $15 to about $150,
depending on how you have it done.
In both cases, the biggest problem is finding the part. From your
description, the LCD panel itself is likely not defective. The inverter
is more likely the problem than the lamp, but either could cause this.
phoenix wrote:
- Posted by phoenix on November 12th, 2006
thanks Barry, that certainly helps, I will have it checked out..cheers
Barry Watzman wrote:
- Posted by phoenix on November 12th, 2006
thanks Barry, that certainly helps, I will have it checked out..cheers
Barry Watzman wrote:
- Posted by Pop` on November 13th, 2006
phoenix wrote:
Don't try to catch attention by typing something foolish like "PLEASE HELP
ME!!!! URGENT!!! I NEED YOUR HELP!!!" into the Subject line. Instead, type
something informative (using normal mixed case!) that describes the subject
matter. But don't squeeze everything into the Subject line, and never leave
the message body empty. The Usenet rules say:
The "Subject" line - - tells what the message is about. It should be
suggestive enough of the contents of the message to enable a reader to make
a decision whether to read the message based on the subject alone.
- Posted by Pop` on November 13th, 2006
phoenix wrote:
Don't try to catch attention by typing something foolish like "PLEASE HELP
ME!!!! URGENT!!! I NEED YOUR HELP!!!" into the Subject line. Instead, type
something informative (using normal mixed case!) that describes the subject
matter. But don't squeeze everything into the Subject line, and never leave
the message body empty. The Usenet rules say:
The "Subject" line - - tells what the message is about. It should be
suggestive enough of the contents of the message to enable a reader to make
a decision whether to read the message based on the subject alone.

