J
Joe
Guest
I have a Radio Shack count-up/count-down timer, catalog #63-878. It's
about 2.5"x3.2"x0.70" thick.
It's around 10 years old and some of the input keys had become sticky.
I had to remove the back, then remove the circuit board which was held in
by four screws.
As I gingerly removed the circuit board, the LCD display just fell off the
circuit board. I cleaned some liquidy gunk from the circuit board and the
rubber-membrane keys, and re-assembled the timer.
The display has what looks like a rubber strip on the bottom edge which
contacts about 12 gold plated pads on the circuit board. The contacts are
just lying flat on the circuit board - they are not edge connectors.
The four screws that hold the circuit board to the case also seem to make
the circuit board press tightly against the rubber strip on the bottom of
the LCD.
After re-assembly, the timer works.
I'm glad it didn't have a ribbon cable because they seem to be so fragile.
BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?
--- Joe
about 2.5"x3.2"x0.70" thick.
It's around 10 years old and some of the input keys had become sticky.
I had to remove the back, then remove the circuit board which was held in
by four screws.
As I gingerly removed the circuit board, the LCD display just fell off the
circuit board. I cleaned some liquidy gunk from the circuit board and the
rubber-membrane keys, and re-assembled the timer.
The display has what looks like a rubber strip on the bottom edge which
contacts about 12 gold plated pads on the circuit board. The contacts are
just lying flat on the circuit board - they are not edge connectors.
The four screws that hold the circuit board to the case also seem to make
the circuit board press tightly against the rubber strip on the bottom of
the LCD.
After re-assembly, the timer works.
I'm glad it didn't have a ribbon cable because they seem to be so fragile.
BUT.. how is contact made from the circuit board to that LCD?
--- Joe