any hints where i can buy a replacement motor for the vibrating function ?
as my battery was inflated, i had to remove the motor an i unfortunately torn the cable of.
or do you think i can replace the flat cable with REALLY thin other by soldering . there are soldering points on motor and mainboard of the watch.
Related
I have 2 SX66 phones with Issues.
the 1st wont stop vibrating. I've done the complete reset, used some Delete All Notifications alerts/events/etc app, left the Battery out of the unit for over 2 weeks and as soon as I hook up the cable or turn it on with the batter, it just starts vibrating.
The 2nd phone the speaker is dead. Got crushed in my pocket and pushed in the plastic piece covering the speaker. Its worthless without a Headset or BT Headset, though the BT headset does not relay the VoiceCommand over the Headset like the Wired one does. That and BT Reception on the SX66 Sucks....
Any leads on a place to get the screwdriver to open up the back sliding cover? I have the one for the other Screws.
Thanks
what exaclty are you talking about?
The back cover opens up with small torx bits, something around 8-10.
the board comes off with a normal mini philips head.
The sliding cover also comes off with torx bits.
I Think that's about it.
Hy
i need a broken qtek 9090 for change the front and back cover,
Do you sell it?
I'm in Italy
Bye
Paolo
When you have the tools to take your BA's apart, take the motherboard of the busted speaker BlueAngel and swap it with the motherboard of the BlueAngel with a shaking problem. Use the fully functional one as your main one, keep the other as a parts phone.
If anyone can find me a vibrator motor for the dash, that would be great. mine seems to have died and my phone is not under warranty since march. please!
Thats what my GF said, but I knew better!
Sorry couldnt resist.
inb4 Spam war.
are you shure the problem is the motor, cause the cable is really fragile, mine get cut every time i open my phone.
is there a picutre of what this thing looks like? so if i decide to take it apart, i know what it looks like?
torade said:
are you shure the problem is the motor, cause the cable is really fragile, mine get cut every time i open my phone.
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was their an easy fix to fix the cut wire? you just solder it back together?
.animal said:
is there a picutre of what this thing looks like? so if i decide to take it apart, i know what it looks like?
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I dont have any picture, but, when you take apart your phone, the only cable that conects the back part is the one for the vibrator and this is what always get cut on the end (close to the circuit)
ThereĀ“s no need to solder anything, the connection is similar to the phone line or net cable, joust have to take apart the connector pulling from the ends. its one connector for each cable, so you have to pull from each point at a time.
is this the vibrator motor i need?
http://cgi.ebay.com/HTC-DASH-S620-S...5|66:2|65:12|39:1|240:1318|301:1|293:1|294:50
That's it. I had the wires from mine pull out of the little plug so I replaced the whole thing.
Has anyone had any luck finding replacement parts for the Desire HD? Im mainly looking for the board that connects to the mini usb. I have seen the back antenna cover and the digitizer at certain places.
nooganator said:
Has anyone had any luck finding replacement parts for the Desire HD? Im mainly looking for the board that connects to the mini usb. I have seen the back antenna cover and the digitizer at certain places.
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Click to collapse
You can try these guys
vailable Spare parts
HTC Desire HD LCD, Flex Cable, Speaker, Buzzer/Ringer, Microphone
Antenna, IC, Middle body, Charger connector, Battery Connector, Vibrator
Internal camera, battery cover, Lens, ON/OFF switch, Sim holder, Sim Reader
Keypad, Screw, keyboard ( keypad UI/membrane )
Regards
Hey all, I just recently fixed my inc2 and in the process I lost all but 1 of the screws that hold the board down to the phone as well as the screw that holds the USB port down and have searched high (mostly) and low for a replacement set with no luck. Does anybody know of a vendor that sells just the screws? I replaced the LCD, digitizer, both speakers, and the USB but am really afraid to drop it with nothing holding it together. Btw I replaced all of that for under 40$
Sent from my Incredibly still working
For the past few months, the headphone jack has gotten more and more flaky, to the point that I have to press down on the jack to receive sound. Does anyone know of a DIY fix? Its not the headphones themselves, as it has this problem with every pair I've tried.
jlanik4 said:
For the past few months, the headphone jack has gotten more and more flaky, to the point that I have to press down on the jack to receive sound. Does anyone know of a DIY fix? Its not the headphones themselves, as it has this problem with every pair I've tried.
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Click to collapse
I've had it happen with another Asus model. The solder cracked and the tiny traces broke, resulting in bad connections. What you can do is check continuity between the jack and the circuit. Tedious work, but if you're game, you need a 3.5 mm jack with exposed wires. Trace those wires to the connecting points on the motherboard.
If everything is good, then 2 possibilities: (1) the connecting points inside the female jack (soldered to the motherboard) are worn, causing intermittent contact, in which case you need to replace it. If you can't find one, let me know.
(2) If the problem persists, but varies depending on how much pressure you put on the headphones jack, then maybe it's just dirty. Best is to use high-grade alcohol (91% or more) and clean the inside with a q-tip with less cotton; plus use a toothpick with double-sided tape at one end and swirl inside the female jack to remove impurities and dirt. Good luck.
graphdarnell said:
I've had it happen with another Asus model. The solder cracked and the tiny traces broke, resulting in bad connections. What you can do is check continuity between the jack and the circuit. Tedious work, but if you're game, you need a 3.5 mm jack with exposed wires. Trace those wires to the connecting points on the motherboard.
If everything is good, then 2 possibilities: (1) the connecting points inside the female jack (soldered to the motherboard) are worn, causing intermittent contact, in which case you need to replace it. If you can't find one, let me know.
(2) If the problem persists, but varies depending on how much pressure you put on the headphones jack, then maybe it's just dirty. Best is to use high-grade alcohol (91% or more) and clean the inside with a q-tip with less cotton; plus use a toothpick with double-sided tape at one end and swirl inside the female jack to remove impurities and dirt. Good luck.
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Click to collapse
Thanks. I had a feeling it might just be dirty, but I wanted to know if anyone had any alternative solutions if that didn't work.