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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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Some of the LCD elements (small squares) on the display are failing to
light. If I push on the end of the ribbon cable where it connects to the edge of the display driver PC board, the problem elements will start working until I remove the pressure. This leads me to think that the ribbon cable's connection pads are failing. Is there any way to repair the PC connection pads for each conductor of the ribbon cable on the edge of the board? There isn't any hardware connector for the ribbon cable on the board. It connects directly to the pads on the edge. BTW- This is the second time the display has failed in the same way. I replaced the entire display assembly (LCD and driver board) about two years ago. Cost about $90. The replacement worked fine until recently. Since the home is not occupied in the winter, the heat is turned off. The temperature can get down to well below freezing for days or weeks. Could this be why the display has failed twice? Thanks |
#2
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![]() "Techguy" wrote in message news:PFg1h.4184$WB4.681@trndny04... BTW- This is the second time the display has failed in the same way. I replaced the entire display assembly (LCD and driver board) about two years ago. Cost about $90. Wouldn't a whole new oven cost that? |
#3
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On Mon, 30 Oct 2006 06:08:47 GMT, Techguy wrote:
Some of the LCD elements (small squares) on the display are failing to light. If I push on the end of the ribbon cable where it connects to the edge of the display driver PC board, the problem elements will start working until I remove the pressure. This leads me to think that the ribbon cable's connection pads are failing. Is there any way to repair the PC connection pads for each conductor of the ribbon cable on the edge of the board? There isn't any hardware connector for the ribbon cable on the board. It connects directly to the pads on the edge. BTW- This is the second time the display has failed in the same way. I replaced the entire display assembly (LCD and driver board) about two years ago. Cost about $90. The replacement worked fine until recently. Since the home is not occupied in the winter, the heat is turned off. The temperature can get down to well below freezing for days or weeks. Could this be why the display has failed twice? This reaffirms my belief that modern Sharp microwaves are crap. |
#4
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#5
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Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 30 Oct 2006 06:08:47 +0000, Techguy Has Frothed: Some of the LCD elements (small squares) on the display are failing to light. If I push on the end of the ribbon cable where it connects to the edge of the display driver PC board, the problem elements will start working until I remove the pressure. This leads me to think that the ribbon cable's connection pads are failing. Is there any way to repair the PC connection pads for each conductor of the ribbon cable on the edge of the board? There isn't any hardware connector for the ribbon cable on the board. It connects directly to the pads on the edge. I've done it before but without a picture it's hard to tell what you have. BTW- This is the second time the display has failed in the same way. I replaced the entire display assembly (LCD and driver board) about two years ago. Cost about $90. The replacement worked fine until recently. Since the home is not occupied in the winter, the heat is turned off. The temperature can get down to well below freezing for days or weeks. Could this be why the display has failed twice? Thanks I doubt it. Lots of new stock is stored in non climate controlled areas in the winter. I would buy a new oven if you can't fix this one for a lot less than 90 bux. The microwave is built into the cabinets above the stove with an exhaust fan. A new one would cost at least $200 along with the hassle of removing and installing. This ribbon cable is a thin plastic strip about 50-mm wide. It has two layers. One layer has the conductive traces imprinted on the inside surface. The other serves as a backing layer to protect the traces. The back surface of the ribbon cable is peeled away from the conductor layer at the end of the cable. The backing is glued to the reverse side of the PC board edge to relieve the strain on the conductor connections. I can't tell for sure if the ribbon conductors are soldered to the board. The protective backing makes me think the conductor traces are self adhesive and the backing has to be removed to attach the conductors to their corresponding pads on the PC board. Does this sound like the kind of ribbon cable you repaired? Could you give me a general idea of what you did to repair yours? I can supply a picture if necessary. Thanks |
#6
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![]() "Techguy" wrote in message news:eDU1h.4659$WB4.2602@trndny04... This ribbon cable is a thin plastic strip about 50-mm wide. It has two layers. One layer has the conductive traces imprinted on the inside surface. Do a search for zebra connector for more info. |
#7
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Homer J Simpson wrote:
"Techguy" wrote in message news:eDU1h.4659$WB4.2602@trndny04... This ribbon cable is a thin plastic strip about 50-mm wide. It has two layers. One layer has the conductive traces imprinted on the inside surface. Do a search for zebra connector for more info. I'm familiar with a foam Zebra strip which is several millimeters thick. I've never seen that material used to make a ribbon cable. The ribbon cable in question is made with two thin layers of plastic film sandwiched together. One inner surface has the conductor traces and the other is the protective layer over the conductors. The cable is less than 1-mm thick. |
#8
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![]() "Techguy" wrote in message news:gm_1h.6067$Gg5.3176@trndny02... Do a search for zebra connector for more info. I'm familiar with a foam Zebra strip which is several millimeters thick. I've never seen that material used to make a ribbon cable. The ribbon cable in question is made with two thin layers of plastic film sandwiched together. One inner surface has the conductor traces and the other is the protective layer over the conductors. The cable is less than 1-mm thick. IME rubber zebra strips - haven't seen foam. However it is a fact that some processes are not doable in the field and it is possible that this is one. |
#9
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this is why I stick with the old vacuum flourescent microwaves. work great.
![]() "Homer J Simpson" wrote in message news:bo32h.39205$P7.1441@edtnps89... "Techguy" wrote in message news:gm_1h.6067$Gg5.3176@trndny02... Do a search for zebra connector for more info. I'm familiar with a foam Zebra strip which is several millimeters thick. I've never seen that material used to make a ribbon cable. The ribbon cable in question is made with two thin layers of plastic film sandwiched together. One inner surface has the conductor traces and the other is the protective layer over the conductors. The cable is less than 1-mm thick. IME rubber zebra strips - haven't seen foam. However it is a fact that some processes are not doable in the field and it is possible that this is one. |
#10
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message .. . this is why I stick with the old vacuum flourescent microwaves. work great. Yep. I like my all tube VCR and Ipod also! |
#11
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Homer J Simpson wrote:
"Mike" wrote in message .. . this is why I stick with the old vacuum flourescent microwaves. work great. Yep. I like my all tube VCR and Ipod also! http://www.audiocubes.com/product/Th...Amplifier.html |
#12
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![]() "Techguy" wrote in message news:C7s2h.10290$gf5.1790@trndny01... Yep. I like my all tube VCR and Ipod also! http://www.audiocubes.com/product/Th...Amplifier.html Love it! -- ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++ + Required crap appended to avoid restrictions imposed by brain + + damaged idiots. + + Server Response: '441 Posting Failed (Rejected by POST filter)', + + Port: 119, Secure(SSL): No, Server Error: 441, + + Error Number: 0x800CCCA9 + ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++ |
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