It can. It's usually a broken trace from the display to the board.
Search for conductive epoxy; thats what you'll need to fit it.
I've repaired two Cherry brand DMDs with the flex cables. Do yours
have a thin multi-conductor flex cable folded over connecting the DMD
glass to the board? If so, it is possible to cut out a section of
broken trace(s) and solder small jumper wires directly to the glass.
I used 30 ga. wire wrap wire.
- Kerry
Some have had luck but I find it a frustrating exercise.
but I guess I won't be doing those fixes... at least until I learn to
be that precise.
regards
Damian
I've done this repair on a DMD that had a couple of lines out. I
didn't have to grind the glass, and only had to resolder the breaks.
Does soldering work as opposed to the epoxy?
I can say for sure that soldering works on the flex cable versions. I
scraped the adhesive off with a toothpick, but the soldering iron
seems to melt it away quite well. These displays are high-voltage and
low-current, so the connection doesn't have to be that good.... I'd
think you'd be able to solder it.
- Kerry
Thanks for your help
I put together a short description with the picture I took. I'd be
happy to answer any questions you have.
See if this helps -> http://kcimming.charterinternet.com/dmd_repair/DMD_repair.html
- Kerry
On metal pin ones alway use epoxy, solder almost never works. Also
as someone else noted there is no need to grind the glass. Always
error on the side of too little epoxy. It is easier to add more than
it is to remove excess. Also sometimes I like to remove the broken
leads and replace them one at a time with thin leads cut from a small
resistor or diode. This gets the other leads out of the way and makes
it easier to add epoxy to the site of the break on the glass.
On the plastic ribbons you can still use epoxy, but it doesn't always
work. You can try to solder it but must set you iron on low heat as
it will melt the ribbon cables in no time and make the situation worse
(more lines out). I have also tried adding my own jumpers from the
pcb to the glass, but that is messy and generally not the best way to
do this.
My experience is that ALL metal pins are repairable ALL of the time
with silver epoxy. and the plastic ribbons is less than a 50/50
chance of making it better.
Kris
At the very worst I'll make more dead lines.. but I'm thinking at most
I'll just make that one line unrepairable.. and I suppose I can live
with that. Can't learn without trying, I suppose.. :)
Thanks again
Yes, since the alternative is buying a new display you really have
nothing to lose. On the first one I went from 3 bad columns to about
10 before I gave up and started soldering. The good news is that with
three (or more) adjacent columns to repair there's more room to
work :-)
The patched display has been working for over a month now, so we'll
see how long it holds up.
- Kerry