11/3/09

#1 Digital Camera Repair Problem - Broken LCD Screen

Here is some information about what I believe is the No. 1 issue Camera Repair: broken LCD screens.

We live in a throwaway society, it's just a fact. You buy a new digital camera with pleasure all the trimmings for $ 400, and in 6 months to 1 years it might be worth a half, and then the unthinkable happened: They dropped it and it breaks. The LCD is cracked, or the lens is blocked, what do you do? They head back into the business with the poor little camera and the guybehind the counter (ie nothing about cameras, except for what is written on the packaging, and even less about the camera repair) tells you it is not worth to fix it and you should throw it into the trash to white. They feel angry and ripped raise the camera manufacturer and run it and a new purchase made by someone else.

There are alternatives, there are always alternatives to any problem. Honest! Yes, it costs $ 100 to fix your camera, and yes, you can buy this camera in the bubble packthe shelf W ** l M ** t (they do not pay my bills ... I do not advertise their name, sorry) for less than $ 100, but what kind of quality you expect honesty from a $ 100 camera? Not very good quality, I hope, because you're not going to get it.

# 1 - Broken / LCD screen cracked.

It was hard for me jammed between the lens and a broken LCD screen, but I stuck with LCD for # 1 vote, because it's so easy to break your LCD, you do not even touch, to do the camera!

The LCD --(Liquid Crystal Display) is of the view screen on the back of the camera, you can see, menus, pictures, playback, etc. The LCD is very thin, very fragile, and many many cameras completely unprotected! Look at the back of the camera is lowered, the screen something or is the back of the camera flat and smooth? Unless the apartment you will have a protective "window" or "glass" on the LCD to prevent damage and breakage. If it is not flat, you have to put anything to protect your LCD and should be goodQuality LCD screen protector on the camera and not the thin, flimsy "plastic wrap" plastic film screen protectors, they are worthless.

- Do not leave your camera in your car in winter or summer. Extreme heat can be expansion of the liquid in the LCD cause and lead to crack "and on the other side of things, extreme cold can lead to freeze!

- Do not place anything against the LCD in your camera bag, it is against the LCD to crack and pop (yes, even if a window over them,will break it!)

- Do not place your camera in your back pocket and then sit down!

- Do not place your camera in a breast pocket, and then roll on it.

- ... Do not do with your camera fell into the pocket. =)

OK, so that it works, what are you doing now?

- The manufacturer will be damaged only impact site, and the repair even if the camera is not dropped, etc. You can try to deny, and I wish you luck, but it is not likely to resolve.

- Look for a defectiveCamera on e ** y (hey, they do not pay me to advertise for them ...) and make a good camera from the two, if you are at your fingertips.

- Make sure that an actual camera repair business and not someone that is sent to the manufacturer and will tell you it's $ 200 repair and 4-6 weeks. (If they guarantee to tell you, they can not repair your camera for you, they are forwarding them to the manufacturer)

Many LCD screens are very easy to install and you can do yourself and all you need is a littleScrewdriver. Other LCD's are very difficult to install and even experts do not like them! I can not tell you .... fire is the best and fire ... is the worst it's really not so. Certain series of cameras have 1 or 2 models that are hard at work, but the rest of them are fairly straightforward. You have to decide for yourself whether you open your camera and try to repair it themselves or not.

Like an LCD will replace it?

For most Canon digital camera LCDScreens, for example (with them, as the example because they have the largest market share) everything you do is the ribbon cable for the LCD and the backlight to separate (the light through the LCD and allows you to see what's on the screen) and then install the new LCD. Some come with the accompanying background light, others do not. Some backlight must be soldered onto the mainboard of the camera, others did not.

- Make sure contacts are not directly on the flash capacitor! Then you zap ifThey do, and it will hurt. You will probably throw your camera across the room when it happened. (Yes, I did it, I did the repair cameras for 5 years now so ....) We have 'flash capacitor polluters "and every time we open a camera.

I hope this sheds some light on the subject. You did not throw away your camera because the LCD is broken, and you can even fix yourself!

Thomas Drayton



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