Cosa ti serve
-
-
Locate the battery cover on the bottom of the camera.
-
Slide the battery compartment cover the direction the arrow is pointing to open the compartment.
-
Remove batteries.
-
-
-
Remove the two 2mm screws above the screen using the size J000 screwdriver.
-
-
-
-
Gently lift the lock and detach the flex ribbon from the circuit board with the tweezers.
In each of the flex ribbons there is a tiny hole just outside of the connector. In stead of possible damage from the tweezers try using a small dental pick to gently pull the ribbon out of the connector. It pulls from the center and didnโt seem to damage the ribbon in any way.
-
-
-
Using the J000 Philips head screwdriver, remove the four 7mm screws from the silver panel.
-
Remove the two 5mm screws.
-
Remove the one 3 mm screw.
-
Using the same screwdriver, remove the 3mm screw from the top of the camera.
-
Pull the panel off and set it aside.
The red (7 mm) and orange (5 mm) circles at the top right quadrant of the silver panel should be swapped.
The red circle at the bottom left quadrant of the silver panel is around a plastic post, not a screw. It should be around the screw that has an orange circle around it in the same quadrant.
The second 5 mm screw that should be circled in orange is just to the right and slightly lower than the screw that is circled in red in the bottom right quadrant.
To remove the panel, remove a 5mm screw on the right side of the camera.
-
-
Attrezzo utilizzato in questo passaggio:Tweezers$4.99
-
First, very carefully open the latch on each of the three flex ribbons (two black, one brown).
-
With tweezers, very carefully detach all three flex ribbons from their ports.
-
Carefully detach the flex ribbon from the side.
-
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
Annulla: non ho completato questa guida.
Un'altra persona ha completato questa guida.
Very useful information and pictures, although with a couple of omissions noted in the comments. (Kind of like getting a recipe from your favorite chef who always seems to leave out one or two of the key ingredients.)
Eventually, if you go slowly, you will get all of the screws out. Just take pictures or make a drawing as you go along so that you know which screws go where when you reassemble. I learned quite a bit about what makes this lens jam and may not have to go quite so deep in to the camera the next time Iโm trying to fix a jam.
Phil Smith - Replica