The host is the most important thing here, since I am finding it hard to get a full replacement for the screen. If someone has an answer for a fix, that would be awesome.

  • J'Pol OP
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    214 hours ago

    Yeah. I have an external. I was just hoping that this community might be able to find something I couldn’t. Best I have is that screenshot with the model number.

    • @shalafi
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      16 hours ago

      You’ve already got excellent advice, but I’ll add this to maybe save you some money.

      Since you’re replacing it anyway, go ahead and yank it and get the part number off the back. As Septimaeus said, it’s likely used on several laptop models. Vendors always charge more when you’re searching for the laptop model. Search instead for the monitor model. Also, try eBay and other vendors. You might be surprised at the cost differences after a little shopping.

      • J'Pol OP
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        213 hours ago

        Thanks a lot for the link! I was browsing Amazon and they all had questionable specs.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 hours ago

          No worries. In case this is your first display replacement, few quick tips…

          1. Helps to skim video teardowns like this
          2. Take photos of internals of electronics when you open them up so you can reference them later after reassembly.
          3. Keep track of screws. Trick: unscrew but leave them loose in the holes of the case tray with pieces of tape over each of them. Then you can remove tray without concern.
          4. Bare display edges are especially fragile and often have coatings that scratch easy. Trick: leave protective film on, just put a few pieces of folded tape on edges so you can pull off after install.
          5. Your display connects to the mainboard with two connectors wrapped in gaphers tape the right side: right side of laptop mainboard
          6. Display ribbon terminal (tall one far left) is more fragile than camera/lid sensors (wide one far right). Trick: use guitar pick or credit card to lift clamp right to left, never knife
          7. Ribbon itself often has physical tabs or printed white/color blocks indicating seat depth. This makes it far easier to verify its secure before closing case.

          Good luck!