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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Joe Joe is offline
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Default LCD Without Wire Connectors

I have a Radio Shack count-up/count-down timer, catalog #63-878. It's
about 2.5"x3.2"x0.70" thick.

It's around 10 years old and some of the input keys had become sticky.

I had to remove the back, then remove the circuit board which was held in
by four screws.

As I gingerly removed the circuit board, the LCD display just fell off the
circuit board. I cleaned some liquidy gunk from the circuit board and the
rubber-membrane keys, and re-assembled the timer.

The display has what looks like a rubber strip on the bottom edge which
contacts about 12 gold plated pads on the circuit board. The contacts are
just lying flat on the circuit board - they are not edge connectors.

The four screws that hold the circuit board to the case also seem to make
the circuit board press tightly against the rubber strip on the bottom of
the LCD.

After re-assembly, the timer works.

I'm glad it didn't have a ribbon cable because they seem to be so fragile.

BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?

--- Joe
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Default LCD Without Wire Connectors

On 8/7/2010 7:05 PM, Joe wrote:
BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?


That rubber strip has a lot of conductive strands that
make contact with the gold pads on the circuit board
and the contacts on the edge of the LCD display.

Visually, think of it like a strip of corrugated cardboard
on edge with little bits of wire in each corrugation. ;-)

Jeff
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Default LCD Without Wire Connectors



"Joe" wrote in message
...
I have a Radio Shack count-up/count-down timer, catalog #63-878. It's
about 2.5"x3.2"x0.70" thick.

It's around 10 years old and some of the input keys had become sticky.

I had to remove the back, then remove the circuit board which was held in
by four screws.

As I gingerly removed the circuit board, the LCD display just fell off the
circuit board. I cleaned some liquidy gunk from the circuit board and the
rubber-membrane keys, and re-assembled the timer.

The display has what looks like a rubber strip on the bottom edge which
contacts about 12 gold plated pads on the circuit board. The contacts are
just lying flat on the circuit board - they are not edge connectors.

The four screws that hold the circuit board to the case also seem to make
the circuit board press tightly against the rubber strip on the bottom of
the LCD.

After re-assembly, the timer works.

I'm glad it didn't have a ribbon cable because they seem to be so fragile.

BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?

--- Joe


It's known as zebra strip. It's a sandwich of hundreds of tiny regular
rubber strips, alternated with hundreds of conductive rubber strips.
Compared to the sizes of the gold-plated print lozenges that form the
connection points, and the spaces between them, several conductive strips
will lie on each lozenge, and at least a couple of regular rubber insulating
strips, will be in the gaps. When the whole caboosh is tightly fixed
together, the conductive strips join the PCB lozenges to the deposited metal
connections on the LCD glass.

Have a look at

http://www.densitron.com/displays/content.aspx?id=808

Arfa

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Default LCD Without Wire Connectors

On 2010-08-08, Joe wrote:


The four screws that hold the circuit board to the case also seem to make
the circuit board press tightly against the rubber strip on the bottom of
the LCD.

....
BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?


It's that rubber.

It's made of of axially stacked layers of conductive and non-conductive
elastomer. google "zebra strip" for more info.


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