Fixing the Dreaded iBook Backlight? 173
Aliencow inquires: "I've recently bought an iBook, and it started having the very common backlight problem. Basically, there are two types of things that can cause the problem: either the screen hinges pinching the cables, which is pretty easy to fix if you're not scared of opening things up; or it could be the logic board, which is what happened in my case. I've heard of someone being able to fix it by doing a bypass operation on the board, soldering a wire before the break and soldering it directly on the backlight connector. Aside from that, however I haven't been able to find much about how to fix that particular problem. Have any of you iBook-owning Slashdot readers had to repair your iBook like this? Any hints? If my repair is successful I'll surely snap a bunch of pictures and make a website, as this is a problem that affects a lot of iBook owners."
which backlight problem is it? (Score:1, Insightful)
Which backlight problem are you talking about?
Re:which backlight problem is it? (Score:1)
Extended warranties are a joke when it comes to most electronics, but laptop computers see enough abuse over three years that it's not a bad idea.
Re:which backlight problem is it? (Score:4, Informative)
I do agree that it's not a bad idea to get it for laptops, but you do need to do it before your 1 year is up.
Apple should recall them (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's this common a problem, Apple should recall them.
Danger replaced my HipTop (AKA T-Mobile Sidekick) without me even contacting them, when a very large production run was found to have a defective hinge that may (or may not) damage the wires going to the display.
This must have cost them a fortune, but is good business and impressed me enough to recommend the product highly.
On the other hand, my Vaio F-series has the oh-so-common won't-charge-the-perfectly-good-battery problem and Sony wants to charge me something like $400 to flash the BIOS to fix it (they refuse to post the fix for download)... not to mention I'd be without the unit for a month since it has to be shipped to their repair center, etc.
I won't buy another Sony after this (there's much more to it than that, including a brand new $250 battery that took over a year and a half to get, etc.).
Re:Apple should recall them (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe it's because the Vaio runs M$Windows (by default)?
Hmmmm?
Re:Apple should recall them (Score:2)
No idea.
The way I found out it's actually a BIOS bug (and not a fried charging circuit) was an article in Infoworld a while back (Cringely, I think).
I was quite shocked when I read that many had complained to him, but I hadn't read about it anywhere else.
Re:Apple should recall them (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Apple should recall them (Score:2)
If you recently bought the damn thing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:If you recently bought the damn thing (Score:2)
God forbid you use 3rd party RAM and upgrade to Panther...
yup, been there, done that (Score:5, Informative)
Re:yup, been there, done that (Score:3, Informative)
Re:yup, been there, done that (Score:2)
thats a good deal. I just got an email offering 1 foot naturally for just $39.95.
Re:yup, been there, done that (Score:2)
They charge like $7 plus shipping for five feet.
thats a good deal. I just got an email offering 1 foot naturally for just $39.95.
Re:yup, been there, done that (Score:2, Informative)
i've has the same issue (Score:2)
Searched around on google and found it to be a relatively common problem. Took it into an Apple Store and got if fixed within 3 days.
I questioned the 'genius' about what I found to be a common problem and was told that they had not see such an issue before.
I was a little surprised but I guess they wouldn't say if it was common. Was a little bummed that it occurred just one week o
Apple's Support (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Apple's Support (Score:2)
Fix your stuff in two days
Re:Apple's Support (Score:2)
I can't speak for all 600Mhz iBook owners, but my Dual USB 600Mhz iBook has been nothing but a tank. It's practically bombproof, and I work it hard at least 4 hours or more per day with a lot of travelling.
It's 18 months old and the battery still holds about 3 hours of charge and I've had no problems with the logic board, the screen or anything else on it.
Quality hardware? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:1, Insightful)
I rather think that you'll hear more about it because Apple users paid more. Any piece of equipment can fail, but when the relation ``more money -> more quality'' doesn't hold, it's like getting ripped off twice.
The iBook is the cheapest, lowest-margin laptop Apple has ever made, and it has had a high failure rate.
For any particular company that has several similar products at varying costs, it's not a good idea to have a quality/money
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2)
True, but Apple's problems aren't related to quality/money. They're related to laptops. Even their most expensive TiBooks have a history of product defects and other problems.
Apple laptops may be sexy, but they're much more poorly built than their desktops. I still have a Mac Classic that was built in 1990 and it still works. I'm confident in saying that none of Apple's laptops will last 10 years.
We have 10 year old ThinkPads that still work.
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:1)
I've heard a lot about the ibook G3s but I think they might have stepped up quality control a notch this generation.
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:1, Redundant)
Now for the tiBook. I have been rather impressed with the quality of mine and have had no issues to date. Then again you expect it when you pay and arm and a leg for your laptop. A comm
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2)
FUD
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2)
FUD? Yeah I guess pointing out the truth (that apple's are mass produced by the same companies that make everyone else's notebooks) would induce fear, uncertainty, and doubt in someone who believes they are getting "better quality components and design"
Re:Quality hardware? (Score:2)
If you want a vocal minority here is one. I have fixed my Dell about 8 times in its 4 year history.
2 Mobos
1 Keyboard
1 HDD
2 Hinges
1 Screen
1 CD-Rom
I have fixed my iBook (also 4 years old) once. The burner went out on it.
Yeah, they are mass produced in the same factory but they are made of different components with different quality assurance and engineering. That was my point and it is VERY valid.
Very common problem. (Score:4, Interesting)
The guy a few posts up re quality of Apple stuff (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Very common problem. (Score:3, Insightful)
You had problems with three out of three laptops. Admittedly a very small sample size, but judging by the other posts here, it seems to be a very widespread problem with Apple laptops.
Here's my experience. My wife is on her second Sony Vaio, I used to have a Thinkpad, and I know at least a dozen p
Re:Very common problem. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Very common problem. (Score:2)
Nearly 1,800 people for class action suit (Score:2)
It isn't hard to see that Apple's policy of denying widespread iBook failures is going to bring about blowback. Can it really be worth the bad publicity, loss of customer loyalty and damage to the iBook brand? Does modern corporate experience teach that acknowledging product flaws is always a last resort, is Apple management just in denial, or what?
Out of 3,000,000 (Score:4, Insightful)
That doesn't exactly sound like lawsuit time to me.
If it fails (Score:2)
Good service anyway. (Score:3, Informative)
On a completely unrelated note, my hard drive is starting to make horrendous click of death noises. Only a month out of warranty, damn. Probably would help if I didn't use it all day long. I love my little machine.
Re:Good service anyway. (Score:2)
APM Tuner (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Good service anyway. (Score:3, Informative)
Instead, I recomend that you run, do not walk, to the nearest backup device and backup all your data. The last time I heard click of death noises from my laptop drive, it was about 4 hours later (with about 2 hours of use in that time) that it was complet
I'm curious (Score:2)
Re:I'm curious (Score:2, Flamebait)
If it's under warrantee, quit bitching and get it fixed. If it's not, you should've bought AppleCare. Learn how to fix it yourself, like this guy, or buy a new LCD. They aren't that hard to install, believe me.
Re:I'm curious (Score:4, Informative)
What are they going to do when the warranty runs out? Screen and logic board problems appear to be an ongoing thing with newer apple notebooks. Just sending it in and getting a temp fix doesn't help when it breaks again, out of warranty, because the root cause of the problem hasen't been fixed.
Re:I'm curious (Score:3, Informative)
Do what I do. Ask nicely if they'll fix it anyway. In every case Apple has said yes, and a few times has specifically said "if it's been less than one year since your last repair, we're authorized to do it." On the other hand, when my Sony died, no luck. When my Dell died, no luck. When my Compaq died... well, honestly, I was so happy about that thing dying that I didn't ask.
Gateway might be different... like Apple, they actually have a place you can g
Sorry, but. (Score:1)
"highend"? (Score:2)
Now, I'm not saying that that means apple is excused from offering support; I wouldn't've thought of the two issues as being related at all. But if you feel they are, keep in mind that the ibook is not a "premium" or "highend" product in the senses which I think you mean.
Re:"highend"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seems like some people posting here have had some really good experiences getting their iBooks fixed. Some other people have had bad experiences. Apple being a "premium" brand has nothing to do with it.
I have had good experiences, both first- and second-hand, with Apple hardware. Therefore, they will be my next vendor of choice. You are free to make a different decision. What exactly do you want? Steve to fly
Re:Sorry, but. (Score:2)
Well, I try not to whine... (Score:3)
I mean, what assurance do I have that this won't happen again?
I'm all for being reasonable, and I'm not trying to get a class-action lawsuit going, but events like this hurt my trust o
Re:Well, I try not to whine... (Score:3, Insightful)
People do have a point when they say laptops should last longer than a year, you know.
Re:Well, I try not to whine... (Score:3, Insightful)
When I buy a product new - any product - I have the legal right to expect it to be properly designed and manufactured.
I have the legal right to expect the manufacturer to take care of any problems that result from bad design and/or quality control, without having to buy an extended warranty, because such problems arise from the manufacturer's negligence.
Warranties are there to fix unexpected/unpredictable problems which can happen to even the best built products.
Contract law is there to fix the rest.
Re:I'm curious (Score:2)
Having your computer repeatedly die suddenly tends to make one cranky, and with good reason. When I sent mine back for its second logic board replacement, the Airborne Express guy looked at the label and said, "iBook?" "Yup." "Is it a dead screen? I've been seeing a lot of these packages lately." I was amazed this
Re:I'm curious (Score:2)
You're right that we don't have a way of quantifying the problem - But there have been a LOT of people with the same problem, and the technical flaws have been identified. It's not like this is some kind of mass hysteria: When my logic board died for the second time, with exactly the same symptoms being reported by other users, I wasn't making it
Re:I'm curious (Score:2)
Ibooks, while a minority of our total equipment inventory, make up a majority of the repairs. Granted, they get used very heavily, but the logic board and screen problems are known defects. I suspect
Re:I'm curious (Score:1)
No complaints from me.
Re:I'm curious (Score:3, Informative)
I had it happen... (Score:5, Insightful)
In other words... yeah, the fix is to send it back to Apple to have them take care of it. That's what warranties are all about.
My solution! (Score:2)
I've only tried this once, though, so I don't know whether it will work for others...
Oh, and in Apple's quarterly earnings call yesterday, I believe they specifically mentioned setting aside some money to deal with the "white spots" screen problem some new PowerBooks had, and maybe also the iBook video issue. I didn't hear that part of the call myself, though
Just had the same (Score:4, Informative)
Buy the extended warranty (Score:4, Informative)
This goes for any brand of laptop out there, not just Apple.
Re:Buy the extended warranty (Score:2)
Fortunately, it hasn't been a problem. OTOH, I had a bearing go out on the optical drive, so it was replaced for free. At the time, that was about $300 itself. And I still have a year left, in case pixels go south or whatever. Also, you get fr
Re:Buy the extended warranty (Score:2)
Re:Buy the extended warranty (Score:2)
Also, many /. readers are probably comfortable fixing their own desktop.
Not for the fainthearted (Score:5, Informative)
I tried to repair it, but the only thing that fixed it permanently was forcing the control signal of the backlight (a PCM signal) to maximum by soldering a pullup resistor at a strategic point in the lid. I deliberately leave it as vague as this: you really should know what you're doing when you try this, and you should be able to fill in the details yourself. Google is your friend.
Have any of you iBook-owning Slashdot readers had to repair your iBook like this? Any hints? If my repair is successful I'll surely snap a bunch of pictures and make a website, as this is a problem that affects a lot of iBook owners."
Some repairs are documented online, but more are always welcome.
Disassembling an iBook is hard; reassembling it is even harder. Unless you really, really, REALLY know what you're doing, you're shouldn't try this. Even professional repairmen consider it a difficult machine to work on.
If you still want to do it, the procedure is roughly: remove bottom case, bottom shield, top case, top shield to expose the motherboard. Illustrations can be found online, but be prepared for surprises, in particular lots of sticky tape and screws at weird places. Most importantly: carefully document the origin of every screw you remove. I find it helpful to keep the screws from different disassembly steps separate, so that a sanity check can be done for each step of reassembly.
The video chip is located on the bottom side of the motherboard, under the harddisk, but again, resoldering a loose chip requires professional equipment. The wire loom to the display starts roughly under the 's' key, and goes through the left side of the hinge.
Re:Not for the fainthearted (Score:2, Informative)
When I disassembled my iBook 2001 for replacing the harddisk, I used a large piece of cardboard underneath it. On this cardboard, I used doublesided tape and wrote the locationname of every part next to the tape and gave it an incrementing number. Like this I had all parts documented, and on
2 days out of warranty (Score:3, Interesting)
My specific problem is when I open up the screen and turned the iBook on the backlight would flicker and I'd have to put a little pressure on the back of the screen to push it forwards a little bit for it to work. I had to hold it like that for a while and then it usually took 10 minutes or so until I found a position where it would stay on. Oddly enough though, after it's been on for a while I can move the screen any way that I want and it'll stay on.
So my solution was to set it up as a music server, connect it up to some good speakers, leave it open on my desk and buy a PowerBook. I'm a little pissed, but on the bright side I guess I now have a 12" PowerBook and a sweet little web based interface to iTunes that I wrote last week. On the downside my employer hasn't paid me for 6+ weeks so perhaps the PowerBook wasn't the best idea.
Re:2 days out of warranty (Score:3, Informative)
I called back January 7th or 8th for good measure, and they wouldn't sell me the warranty.
I filed a formal complaint with customer relations (who didn't care and wasn't sympathetic at all) and informed them that I will not be buying an apple portables any longer. (unfortunatley i love the platform too much to give
I fixed mine... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I fixed mine... (Score:2)
That hinge arrangement is an absolute disgrace.
Badly engineered (Score:4, Interesting)
no problem here (Score:1)
I have not noticed any backlighting problems, or in fact, any problems at all.
logic boards (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm on my second iBook since my switch from windows, and while I love them, I'm also on my *fourth* logic board.
Generally the backlight issue is solved by repairing the connector between the screen and the board -- a lot of times, the opening and closing of the lid kind of makes the wires bend back and forth, if you're unlucky, and like a piece of plastic they can snap or grow weak. Pulling it apart yourself is ... difficult. I've done it a few times, and I don't recommend it. You can probably find the actual apple repair manuals on some sites [torrentskickass.com] (*cough*) if you want to do that yourself.
However:
I'd say a higher percentage of the time *any* problem you have on an iBook, particularly the recent ones, is due to logic board failure. The problem is that *everything* is on the logic board, and if one thing goes wrong (IE, the modem shorts out, or a chip on one side of the board gets too hot, etc) the whole thing can have a cascade failure. I've had discussions about this with trained apple repair men, and they've all hated the iBooks because of this issue (which, incidentally, is shared by the Powerbook 12", but those machines fail at a lower rate due to higher quality parts).
So despite whatever you end up doing to fix your machine, you may still need to replace the logic board anyways. If you replace the connector between screen and board and your backlight doesn't come back on, I'd recommend you looking into the logic board replacement, as having one thing go bad on it can lead your machine down a dark path.
Might be a different or similar problem (Score:2)
Right there with you guys... (Score:5, Interesting)
Fast forward to late April of 2002. I'm living at home, in my parents' basement piggybacking off their T1 (no shit), paying down debt via a combination of frugal rent-free living, unemployment checks and the odd freelance gig thrown my way. I'd sold my Win(D'OH!)s machine awhile back. I started getting mild electrical shocks from the metal rings around the footpads on the iBook, and the screen was flickering like mad and wouldn't go to full brightness. I needed to wrap things up on a freelance gig, so I called Apple, still well in warranty and got them to send me a box. It gets to be June 1st or so and I send it in. They repair it and I have it back in-hand less than 48 hours later, functioning perfectly. Life is good...up to a point. A choad at the Apple Store in the Mall of America tells me that I have 30 days in which to make a warranty claim if the repairs go bad.
~45 days after the repair, I'm out of my main warranty by a long shot, and I think I'm out of the repair service warranty. Problems begin to recur. Basically, I think I'm fucked, so I kinda decide to put off repairs until I absolutely have to. I'm back at work full-time and kicking ass on my bills, so I should be able to cover it. Well, about 120 days after the repair work was done, I'm in the Apple Store, looking at the toys, and I overhear mention that service work has a 90-day coverage. When I talk to the clerk about it, he tells me it's always been 90 days, and that he's sorry the other guy was wrong, but that there's nothing he or I can do about it.
So I stewed for awhile. Fast forward to 12/30/2003. In a fit of boredom at work, I drop an email to sjobs@apple.com, explaining the above...not asking for anything. I just want him to be aware of the communications disconnect in the store and expressed disappointment in the quality of the product.
I come home on 1/5/2004 and there's a message on my answering machine from someone at Apple that wants to discuss the email I sent to Steve. I think "practical joke" and then realize that I didn't tell anyone about the email. The guy and I finally make contact with each other last Thursday. He wants to hear the story, so I go into detail about it, again, and we talk for a bit. Then he says, "Well, we want to make this right. We'll cover it outside of warranty this one time. And you'll still get the 90 days of coverage on the repair work."
My jaw literally dropped. He hooked me up with the tech group, filed a repair ticket for me, and had a box sent Airborne Express overnight to me. I talked to the tech, and he told me that the work order ticket basically covered anything wrong with the laptop, including cosmetic damage. I nearly shit. So we went over the problems, and that was that.
I shipped the iBook out this Tuesday morning (1/13/2004). I spoke with the people at Apple today and they informed me that they had replaced the entire upper shell (cosmetic damage), several parts of the power subassembly, the little rubber footpads (god, how that warms my heart), and went down a laundry list of other items. They said it might get back onto a truck tonight to come home.
This isn't the first time that Apple has come through for me, I'm sure it won't be the last, but they've cemented me as a Customer For Life.
Re:Right there with you guys... (Score:2)
What I wonder is that if Apple really came through for you, would you have had so many problems with your computer as you did? I think its great that they fixed ur comp outside of warranty because of a screw up on their part, but I also think that when you buy something it should last, especially something as important as a computer.
Re:Right there with you guys... (Score:2)
Re:Right there with you guys... (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Right there with you guys... (Score:2, Insightful)
Good to hear that some people have positive experiences with Apple support. Mine are far worse.
Why not send it back to Apple? (Score:3, Informative)
Take it to an Apple Store, or fedex it to Apple (after calling 'em up for an RMA), and wait a week.
I did that when mine went out not 3 months in. Haven't had any problems since.
A word from the silent 99% (Score:2, Informative)
My Dual USB 700 14" laptop is 1.5 years old. No LCD problems at all. I used it several hours a day every day. The hard drive started acting up (after warranty expiration) so I swapped it out for a 60 gig. You can't expect a hard drive to last very long these days anyway. Now that Quantum is gone, hard drives don't last very long.
In fact, after 15 years and 6 Macs, the only real Apple hardware failure I've seen was when the sound went out on my
Send it back to apple (Score:3, Informative)
About two months ago, my girlfriend's iBook was having problems. Unfortunately it was way out of waranty, and we had bought it second hand (at a very reasonable price). The hard drive was making clicking noise of death. So I thought, no big deal, I'll just swap it out.
So I talked with the people at the Genius Bar at the local Apple store (great folk by the way), and verified that it was just a standard ide laptop hard drive. They said it was, but advised against me doing it myself. I thought, yeah, whatever. less than 48 hours later I found myself wishing I had taken their advice, but I get ahead of myself.
Anyways, I decided to do a dry run on my 15 inch powerbook, just to see if there would be any surprises. It was easy enough to get to the drive. Satisfied, I decided to go ahead with her iBook.
Now, if I would have just googled for instructions on how to dismantle an iBook, I would have discovered the magnitude of my mistake. iBooks are laid out very different from powerbooks. In fact, in the iBooks, the hard drive is pretty much the last thing you get to.
Now, your problem isn't the hard drive, it's the backlight. that's much easier to get to, in much the same way a hand grenade is much easier than a nuke. However, if it's still an option, just ship it in.
Take it or leave it. You might be more inclined in the ways of hardware than I am. However, if you decide to go forward and do it yourself, get yourself an empty egg carton, or something similar. Label the holes, and keep track of which screws went where, because you're going to have a lot of them.
What he said - iBooks are SOBs to disassemble... (Score:3, Informative)
I successfully replaced the hard drive in my 500 MHz dual USB, using these instructions [mac.com]. The first time I took it apart, it took three hours - two to get the hard drive out, and one to re-assemble it afterwards.
Everything appeared to work at
iBook G3 not iBook G4 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not a prob with the G4 or just not shown up yet (Score:2)
I haven't had any truoble with my G4 iBook ethier
Might help (Score:3, Informative)
Why Apple gets attacked and Sony Not? (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a love thing. Really, I'm serious. It's the hazard of loyalty. That loyalty has been cultivated personality that equates Apple and it's proponents on a human level. Mac users have a hard time seeing Apple as just another callous, bottom-line first organization. It's part of having built an OS from the the user's perspective. The engineering serves the user. The user isn't forced to serve the engineer's laziness. When people get accustomed to having things work well, they take offense. It's unexpected.
It's tough to live to such a standard, and some people take their loyalty, and any betrayal of it a little too far. Some cheated spouses will forgive. Others carry through quite acrimonious divorces. Sorry to say, those hate sites are aggrevied spouses.
That's one group, but there are those others that have never liked Apple or it's products. They just like those people who take an instant, unaccountable, dislike of another individual. Having taken a dislike, they will look for reasons to rationalize it. Using the thinnest of reasons, they will tear down the other's character without even knowing the other person.
The fact that Apple suffers from stupid attacks is testament to it's ability to make people think of it as a friend, a company that is looking out for their best interest. Despite the fact that it's a corporation, people ascribe the company a measure of humanity.
I can't think of another company that engenders such affection. Hate, yes, but the best example of that is M$, and the hate directed at them is, for the most part, a defense of the love of Apple (or Linux).
For the most part, we don't expect corporations to have our best interests at heart. Hell, we don't expect them to have a heart, just a cold avariscious greed to separate us from our earnings. So, when Sony, or another corporation, treats customer's poorly there is little protest.
We've learned to take corporate mistreatment with diffidence. Apple is very rare in this respect. We expect them to treat us well. When they act like any other corporation it's a betrayal of those expectations, and betrayal is one of the most aggrieved emotions.
my experience (Score:2)
kinda sucks but since I haven't had to pay for anything except my time, I'm not yelling too loud.
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:1)
Nevermind (Score:1, Offtopic)
I thought it referred to a backlite keyboard, or a way to make the plastic that surrounds the screen light up (kinda like those makeup mirrors).
Now
Re:Nevermind (Score:1)
And you're right. the power button doesn't glow. Mad props to you if you mod it so it does!
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Hold F1 until the little bar goes all the way down to see what it's like with the backlight off. To turn it back on, hold F2.
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:2, Informative)
Assuming you are talkin about an iBook: All have backlights. Otherwise the TFT would be pretty dark.
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:2)
Re:iBook has a backlight? (Score:1)
Re:iBook Backlight - Apple Care (Score:3, Insightful)
My question is, is it really worth it? Personally, if had to go through the hassel of replacing one of my computers every 11 months I would forsake whatever company I bought it from forever. Right now I'm using one of the cheapest laptops that I could find 4 years ago, and it is still chugging along fine. The only problem I have ever had with this sucker was having some keys on the keyboard stop responding. The problem was fixed in a week under warran