uzywany-sprzet.pl - Dell 2407WFP Monitor Power Button Repair Part 4


Dell 2407WFP Monitor Power Button Repair Part 4


(od) : thinkofwhy | dział/obszar: Howto & Style | czas w sekundach 09:10 | odwiedziny, zainteresowanie: 30507 |
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  • Just saved me from buying a new monitor - excellent!
  • Thanks! Helped me greatly.
  • Thanks a lot for taking the effort to make a video and upload it for this repair. Fixed mine today.It quite disappointing to see a cheap plastic hinge design for these buttons. They will break if you press on the hinge side of the button after a while.Buttons in essence should be a free floating design on a silicon rubber base with a small projection to press on the circuit board. They should be designed to be able to be pressed in the centre of the button, not just the left/right side like in this design.
  • Many thanks, that's fixed my broken button
  • fixed mine today, thank you!
  • Thanks for explaining how to remove the bezel, I was one step away from doing a cricket bar repair.
  • btw is it possible to buy only that control board from somewhere ? is so then when can i source it from ?
  • Thanks for your help "thinkofwhy", Easy fix in less than 10 minutes. :)
  • @suckmybat It appears I've open up the proverbial can of worms. Play with the power supply @ your own risk. Having said that, ENGAGE!!!
  • That's what the doc told my ma when I was born. He he. COWABUNGA!!!
  • Would it work to use the same method to repair a Gateway FHD 2400? apparently it got broke not cuz of use but after a power blackout. Just wondering.
  • Thank you so much. I was having no luck getting the unit apart. :)
  • Well, now, that's no fun. :(
  • I woke up this morning....and wound up fixing my broken monitor power button!! Wow, thanks so much for spending the time to create your tutorial. It made my life much much easier!! I owe you a beer!! (P.S. Good job!)
  • My monitor switch broke, I checked my warranty and it was more than 1 year since it expired. Used your video guide to check what was wrong and found out it was the switch plastic that broke. Seems Dell made that plastic to break easily, as it i found out that it was probably replaced before. Anyway improvised on the switch and got it back up and running fast. Thanks for saving me to spend money on another monitor, although I was tempted on the 27' one ..=)
  • Hey man just wanted to say thx, rlly helped me. My on/off button was rather broken so I had to make a hole next to the hole of the button, since you only see the led when you try to turn it on, since the on/off button is next to it and not reachable from the hole of the button itself (so made a hole next to it to reach it). But thx anyways m8 :)
  • @italeffect That worked for me too - look forward to my button breaking properly so I can follow all of @thinkofwhy's video. :-)
  • usted es agradable
  • Worked like a charm.
  • Good info, but sooo slow. A lot easier if you leave the monitor on its stand and work on it vertically.
  • Thank you so much. Great tutorial. You are a real money saver.
  • Thanks very much for these videos. seeing exactly what was involved made the task so much easier. I word of caution to others who take the back cover and are not careful about the little black button. That button is there to release the catch that hooks onto the monitor stand. If, like me, you put it back wrong you will in for a surprise. It needs to fit into the back part of the monitor so that pressing it shoves down the hasp. Make sure it is working before reattaching stand to screen.
  • I've had this problem for 2 years!! Thanks - sorted now!
  • Well, I don't really know, if by know you mean physically observing. However, by guessing, I have at least a 50% chance of being correct.
  • @regularityaudiolabs Soon, grasshopper, you will be more powerful than me.
  • @fastj1962 You'd still end up with a button broken off at the plastic hinges anyway. You could also glue on a dried split pea, or a dead beetle.
  • @skeptixxx Probably will not help, since it is not a button issue. Seems like your display is toast. :(
  • Thank you for this video, it was very helpful. I had same problem, followed you step for step and it fired right up. I I paid 500 + for the monitor when it was new and i cant believe it crapped out for a tiny plastic piece that scotch tape could fix. Thanks again.
  • Hey, thanks for the help! I got this fixed in no time with you help.
  • Sounds like color banding, which is common for the Dell 2407WFP. The only solution is to not watch a grey screen. :)
  • WOHOO finally my dell runs again! the vid itself didnt help me much... no details visible. but i saw where to open the housing.. that was enough help for me! i used a non-conductive flexible goo glue to make things happen again.
  • I'm glad I could help.
  • @pbco2010 Well, they are DITS after all.
  • @wakeupscreaming So, you wanna thicker Dell D'oh? That'll cost extra.
  • Radical approach, dude.
  • They should have known, through testing, that the power switch would be used most frequently and they should have reenforced it to last longer. It's too bad that displays are not internet connected so that i could broadcast a msg to all Dell D'oh! displays that pops up on the screen and warns people about the power button issue. Hmmm...
  • wish that work for me. I have Dell SP2309Wc which has capacitive touch buttons. Can't get it work. I've ripped the ribbon out when dissmantle. Therefor I've replaced ribbon by spare IDE cable - about 20 minutes of soldering. Still can't get it work. all it does is power LED is on - white. any idea ?
  • Actually I couldn't screw the pcb back on without taking off the back (so scratch my 'work on it vertically' comment) :-) I used a little dab from a hot glue gun which I reckon would last longer than tape. Either way it's so easy to do again - though you'd want to be sure not to strip the thread where the tiny screws go in.
  • Many Thanks! I just got this problem, found your vid and applied your method. I did managed to lose one of the small screws for the circuit board while watching your vid :). Typing on my 2407WFP right now! Cheers!
  • Thank you for this video (and the other 3!) I think I could have figured out most of it, except for taking off the bezel and how to be careful for the ribbon cable, That was essential and very helpful. Thank you again!
  • @westfield90 To remove another button would leave you in the same situation, except that you'd have two broken off buttons instead of one. D'oh!
  • @redbuttedmonkey Yes, don't use actual incantations when fixing the Dell D'oh!
  • Fix worked. Thx @thinkofwhy !
  • Thank's a lot for the guide.Greetings from Brazil we owe you a caipirinha Drink :)
  • @inventorable I'm not happy with what happened with my Dell's power button, but I still think my Dell is a great display. I've had it for almost four years and it still has excellent picture quality. And I'd buy another one if this one really died, and was beyond resurrection. Dell is a corporation, so they won't admit fault for a silly engineering mistake ( ie. engineered failure) like a worn out button hinge, they want you to buy a new display. But, thankfully, there's the internet. Yeah!
  • Time repairs all malfunctioning cheap plastic hinge buttons. But 2 years?? I cry for thee. :(...
  • It's the real Never Ending Story. There must be a great number of Dell d'ohs out there.
  • Many thanks for this video, you just save my 2407WFP Monitor!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Jeśli szukasz czegoś więcej, zobacz i sam oceń czy ciekawe.