Remove or reduce a screen noise

Marixita

New member
Hi everyone. You hear this high pitched noise from you pda screen? In some cases this noise can be really distorbing.
I cannot read for a long in silence because the noise drives me crazy.
OK, so Opening my zire71 once again (i opened it at least some 100 times) i tried to look for the problem and if it is possible - to solve it.
Anyway, i do NOT recommend following these steps, consider them as demostration only. First , if your device is under warranty -

PalmOne DOES replace the units this the abovementioned defect. Also this operation is very risky, you can destroy your screen of whole

pda in second. Anyway, here's the process:
_MY_ zire looks a little bit different from inside :-), but it shouldn't bother you , it's not related to the problem anyway.
OK, so let's open Zire71:
50b3c07d40f12d37e4f95.jpg

After removing the blue protective plastic it looks like this:

50b3c07d40f12db4c0461.jpg

Next stage: - pull out the main board and unplug the cable which connects board to screen electronics.:

50b3c07d40f12e4279b71.jpg

Well, after experimentig a little i found out that nois is NOT coming from this small pcb on the creen. I tried listening the this small pcb from

both sides. No noise. The nois is also has notheing to do with backlight. Look at the previous picture. The most left small connector - is a

backlight. After disconnecting it - noise continues as before. Nois is coming from the surface of the screen itself and almost zero at the

screen's back. So let's unplug the screen itself:
50b3c07d40f12f5f5809c.jpg


Thisi is how it looks from the side. The bottom lair - is a digitizer which registeres your taps.
50b3c07d40f12fc79229b.jpg

The digitizer in all such Transflective screens is soft, unlike previous palm V , VX, and palm III, also other models.
After experimenting a while with digitizer i found out that if you raise a digitizer just a little bit - 1/3 of mm - the noise almost stops.

I had to experiment powering the unit in disassambled condition , which is a bit risky:
50b3c07d40f133bb8808c.jpg

Ok, so let's eject the digitizer very carefully:
50b3c07d40f130b441313.jpg



50b3c07d40f13106f0176.jpg

After completely removing the digitizer, the picture looks like this:
50b3c07d40f1316b35fff.jpg

Than let's cover the screen with regular FOIL, all of the perimeter, including graffiti area.
50b3c07d40f131d5554ed.jpg

When finished, it looks like this:
50b3c07d40f133cf44117.jpg

Now put the digitizer back, you can even notice, that in the left bottom corner part of foil can bee seen. Don't worry, you will not
see it in assembled state.
50b3c07d40f1344801fb5.jpg

Let's connect the screen and check that everything is working.
50b3c07d40f134bab1812.jpg

Assemble the screen again, by the way, i also put foil under the small pcb - just in case...
50b3c07d40f135201e7e1.jpg

After assembling everything back again - let's check that digitizer is working properly.
50b3c07d40f1357881d29.jpg

Conclusion.
To be honest, i must say, that nois is no Completely removed - but it is very silent and can be heard only when putting your ear near the

screen.
 
Lengthy, detailed and brave. How cool!!

Thank you for that . . . my screen is NOT noisy, but I would undertake the operation thanks to your post, if necessary. Nice to see the details and thought you put in to helping -- God knows I've seen enough posts where people complained about screen noise.

The repair job is similar to soldering a ground wire between the volume and tone pots of an electric guitar to the output jack to reduce static hum, and if that doesn't work using copper foil or conductive nickel paint to "soundproof" the inside electronics cavity of the guitar. I've done it to a couple - never thought it would work on a PDA!! Terrific and good to know.

Great job!!! I'll save that to Notepad if you don't mind, for reference. Why? Because I'm more than likely getting ANOTHER T3 as a spare when the "Cobalt onslaught" takes hold in another couple of months - I'm sticking with OS5 and this might come in VERY HANDY.

Take care and thank you.
 
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