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I have just attempted to replace an LCD screen on a laptop. Before reassembling everything I plugged the new LCD in and switched things on to check the screen worked. All was good.
I then put everything back together and in the process I seem to have destroyed the Inverter chip. At least thats my best diagnosis.
The only thing I can think of that caused this to happen is perhaps static - I wasn't wearing any static wristband, nor did I think to touch anything metal.
Is this possible?
1Not really an answer, I don't think "fry" is the right word, but it can (rarely) damage chips. Typically, it is more likely that you accidentally plugged it in wrong, one pin over slightly or similar. – William Hilsum – 2010-09-19T01:18:47.627
ESD from a USB port fried my south bridge in an ASUS P4P800 board, smoke and everything. Slightly different, since this happened when it was powered on, not during assembly with no power. Looked almost like this http://www.abxzone.com/forums/f143/ideas-burnt-out-ich5r-chip-p4p800-84122.html
– Bratch – 2010-09-19T02:38:16.493Does it work again if you dis-assemble it? Maybe the original fault is to do with the assembly (e.g. pressure on a component board) – BrianA – 2010-09-19T06:58:35.097
@Wil I dont think I unplugged and replugged any of the connections between having it working and reassembling the casing to find it not working again. – Mongus Pong – 2010-09-19T08:49:40.610
@BrianA, No. I have tried many different configurations since all without success. – Mongus Pong – 2010-09-19T08:51:39.380
There was an old post on the Dell forums where a user got a good static jolt when he touched his mouse, fried the onboard usb, so yes its possible. Touching metal on a regular basis while working will prevent this, or use a wristband as you suggested. Sorry about your troubles. – Moab – 2010-09-19T17:05:42.033
@Moab, thanks. Its all a part of the journey! – Mongus Pong – 2010-09-19T21:46:16.830