Laptop LCD repair. INVERTER or BL ?

Hi ,

Having a laptop with a suspected bad backlight or Inverter.

I had changed the BL but still no display. Can see the image on the screen with a flashlight but the BL doesn't lit.

How can I confirm if the Inverter is OK ?

What is the voltage that I should read at the BL input ?

I have a scope if required.

Tks...

Reply to
Ben
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Usually 5V, but it may vary and you provide no make and model number. Good luck.

Bob

Reply to
Bob Shuman

If you changed the backlight, what's left besides the inverter? I'm gonna guess that the liklihood of an inverter failure is MUCH greater than the liklihood of failed logic driving it. Unless you have access to a high voltage probe, the backlight voltage will be well in excess of the rating on most normal scope probes. And if the new backlight is not lit, you can suspect that the voltage ain't present. You can wave your scope probe around over the backlight inverter transformer and tell if it's running. There's often a cap in series with the backlight that can go open. There's sometimes a fuse on the inverter board. Sometimes, they go open for no reason. mike

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Reply to
mike

I have a high voltage probe. What should be the voltage ~ ?

Is a meter in AC mode (1kV) can see something or is too high ?

I also suspect that the BL taht I changed was maybe bad. Near the contact pin on one side , I saw a very small piece of glass remove. That is why I want to confirm the Inverter before sending the BL for replacement.

Tks for your help....

Reply to
Ben

Short answer is that I don't know. I expect the striking voltage is gonna be in the range of 1500V. But that's not what you're gonna see on a meter. You're gonna need a scope high voltage probe with enough bandwidth to see the transient. And depending on the probe, it's gonna load the circuit. And if the secondary is not isolated, you run the risk of blowing up the inverter or the scope with the ground loop. Just too many unknowns to predict. First thing to do is see if the inverter is even running. You can probe the primary side with the scope. Or just wave the probe in the air near the transformer.

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Reply to
mike

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