My MDA Compact III's green call button is not working. It is alsoways bringing up phone dial pad. I thought the button might be struct and opended the phone. It is ok. May be the membrane is problem. How to change the membrane and where I would get it
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I'm curious to know if you can get it back together with all the seems as tight as when it was new. I want to get a new case off ebay but I want to know if there's problems with if fitting together again after it's been disassembled.
I was able to do it. It came out pretty good but I did slightly bend the metal edge of the new frame when I had to reopen it to align the reset button cover. But it's so slight, no one would ever be able to tell but me. All in all, it wasn't too bad, but it was just nerve racking having your $500 phone ripped apart and wondering if it will work when you put it back together - if you can get it back together. I was so relieved when I got the WM screen again!
A few pieces of advice:
For one, the instructions I read just said to disconnect the ribbon cables. Well it doesn't say that all you have to do is flip up the little plastic part to release the tension from the ribbon. (figured that out the hard way)
Also, make sure the rubber covers for items like the mic and reset button line up before you resecure the board to the frame. You DON't want to have to reopen it.
My phone will now stay covered with an excellent silicone cover made by Boxwave. The cut-outs are precision - you can get to everything. Also, it fits nice and tight like a glove. And it's just thick enought to protect, fit in the carrying case, and allow you to use all the buttons easily, especially the scroll wheel. (my last cover was too thick to use it with the cover on) I don't want to have to do this surgery an my phone any time in the near future so this is staying on my phone.
Problem when change housing
Yesterday I've change my M700 housing with P800. But as we know, they have different button map.
Now, I am trying to set up a hotkey for the Call button (Green button),
ie, when I press the call button, an application of my choice would
start running. For that I need to change the default settings in the
registry of the Pocket Pc. Could someone tell me where the default
settings of the call button is stored in the registry and what all
values should I change in the registry so that I can setup the call
button hotkey. Any help would be highly appreciated.
Why not just download hbutton and map as many programs as you like to the other available buttons? I've got like 12 prog mapped to 5 buttons.
Edit: Oops. I missed the point of your post. The buttons are mapped differently.
The "w" key on my Touch Pro2 requires a hard press in order for it to register. Can you direct me on how to resolve this? Is the keyboard easily replaceable or is it glued to the circuit board? Could it be dust?
This is strange, as I hardly ever use the hardware keyboard.
The bad news is that the keyboard interface is intergrated into the main board (glued on). You might be lucky and the W on your keypad might be missing a little of it's rubber under the key. You would then be able to change the keypad and fix the problem. You would have to take the phone apart to check under the keypad. With just the W having a problem the keypad would still be usable, but you do have the software keyboard.
krekol said:
The bad news is that the keyboard interface is intergrated into the main board (glued on). You might be lucky and the W on your keypad might be missing a little of it's rubber under the key. You would then be able to change the keypad and fix the problem. You would have to take the phone apart to check under the keypad. With just the W having a problem the keypad would still be usable, but you do have the software keyboard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's what i was worried about. How unfortunate. I barely use the keyboard... Could it somehow be dust?
ilprofesionale said:
The "w" key on my Touch Pro2 requires a hard press in order for it to register. Can you direct me on how to resolve this? Is the keyboard easily replaceable or is it glued to the circuit board? Could it be dust?
This is strange, as I hardly ever use the hardware keyboard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This might help you:
http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Installing-HTC-Touch-Pro-2-Keyboard/5544/1
I would say no to dust being the problem. I would think if there was something between the keypad and the keyboard it would make the W more sensitive.
krekol said:
I would say no to dust being the problem. I would think if there was something between the keypad and the keyboard it would make the W more sensitive.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, this would make sense considering that the photos I looked it makes it seem that the click mechanism is sealed off like a blister.
Perhaps sticking a piece of electrical tape in there would make it more sensitive!
Still thinking about how to fix this. any more suggestions would b great.
hello
I broke the power button off of my Desire Z.
When he opened the back cover. :crying:
photo:
http://i50.tinypic.com/kegj82.jpg
Has a solution?
Not very well as the button is now smooth. There is a sort of metal armor leaving a small gap. For there I put a thin screwdriver, and I managed to turn the phone.
I think if I can put a small plastic piece with the button out of the housing pressure do to turn ...
It is a button like this but it seems to only 2 feet.
http://www.ebay.es/itm/HTC-G2-T-Mob...325?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item4ab4e83b55
regards
(sorry mistakes, Im spanish)
Fixed: D
Pedi those volume buttons and saw that they were equal
An electronic engineer friend made me soldering the buttons.
and works
regards
Good morning.
I am working on a Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10 inch for a co-worker who recently dropped it and shattered the screen.
The LCD underneath is fine, so I ordered a digitizer for it from a seller on ebay (seller name withheld)
I installed the new digitizer last night, but now the soft keys at the bottom next to the "home" button do not work. They light up fine, but touching them does nothing.
Are these soft keys based in the digitizer, or do they "pass through" and actually trigger the sensor below which houses the light. Are they supposed to be stuck to the screen to work?
thanks in advance!
-Billb3rt
I asked this already in a German Android Forum, but did not get a right answer yet:
My left shift key is jammed on the Pixel C Keyboard. Maybe a tiny piece fall in to the gap between key and frame.
I tried to blow it away, but it did not help.
So my question, does anyone knows how the key is fixed to the keyboard frame?
Is it glued or is it fixed in a way that after a removal it can reattched and works as before?
The iFixit Pixel C tear down does not show this detail.
They probably aren't meant to be removed, I just had to do the same with another keyboard. You can try to slip a knife blade under there and pry it up slightly so you can see if anything is under there.
Sent from my Pixel C using Tapatalk
The iFixit team answered my question regarding the jammed keyboard key and shows also how the key are fixed to the keyboard on the their Pixel C tear down page.
iFixit said:
* With an opening pick we can simply pop off the single keys.
* Behind it we find the traditional scissor mechanism. Larger keys have an additional small metal bar.
*The keys are also easy to clip on again. We are a bit worried about the tiny plastic clips breaking when trying to insert a key in the wrong orientation.
See also: https://de.ifixit.com/Teardown/Google+Pixel+C+Teardown/62277
It worked, I could remove the key cap, cleaned the scissors mechanism and the shift key works as before. But be careful, the plastic clips which are attached on the metal wire bars are really fine and fragile. Use only soft pressure while assembling the key.
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