>Ward,
>
>My 17" Apple Display is blinking. I tried everything Apple's site 
>said to do and it is still blinking. It is doing two fast and one 
>long blink, which I believe has to do with the backlight. Is there 
>an easy repair for this or is this something major? Also, will it 
>hurt to continue using it.
>
>Nora Probasco

I'm not Ward :) but I thought I'd throw some additional grist in the 
mill for other readers o' the list since I just went through this 
with my 15" display.  The 2 fast/ 1 slow blinking light is a 
diagnostic telling you a backlight has failed, as the document Ward 
pointed you to points out.  That can mean either a backlight 
fluorescent tube has burned out (CCFL, cold cathode fluorescent tube) 
or the inverter board inside the display has barfed, and isn't 
supplying power to one or more of the backlight CCFL tubes.  In the 
case of the 17" display though, it turns out this is a VERY common 
problem with the inverter board.  There are two CCFL tubes at the top 
and two at the bottom of the 17 inch display, one in each corner, but 
it is MUCH more likely to be the inverter board in this particular 
case.  You'll probably notice if you look at the screen closely that 
it is darker towards one of the corners - that probably means a 
portion of the inverter board supplying power to that corner has 
croaked.  The board actually has four complete inverters supplying 
juice to the four tubes.

In my case, I didn't know whether it was the tube or the inverter 
board, but I figured what do I have to lose by opening the display up 
and having a look. I looked at the inverter board first because it 
was an easier repair to make if that turned out to be the problem - 
less work :).  One portion of the board looked like it had taken a 
direct hit from a photon torpedo - the transformer was charred and 
the board it was soldered to was scorched, so it was pretty clear 
that this was the problem.

I searched the web and found <http://www.lcdpart.com>.  They had full 
illustrated instructions on opening up the display and replacing the 
inverter board, and they sold a replacement board for $110, way less 
than a new display or the exorbitant repair cost.  They also have an 
improved board that isn't nearly as likely to choke as the original 
board - this costs about $130.

If you are even slightly adept at working on computer gear, you'll 
have no problems doing the replacement at all.  The illustrated 
instructions at 
<http://www.lcdpart.com/images/Apple_Inverter_installation.pdf> are 
pretty clear and make it easy - took me about 20 minutes to put in 
the replacement board and have my display up and running again.

I've no idea why Apple and other manufacturers are so ornery about 
repairing LCD displays - clearly that are a few parts inside that can 
easily and economically be replaced if they wanted to do so.

The same outfit also sells replacement tubes for LCD displays - like 
all light bulbs they will eventually burn out, but they are pretty 
long lived.  The tubes are pretty cheap, around $10-$15 each, but it 
is a bit more work to replace those - they are pretty fragile and 
some soldering is involved.  It might well still be worth doing 
though - the LCD panel practically never burns out, so new backlight 
tubes pretty much makes a display good as new.

In my case, I didn't have to fool with the tubes - a replacement 
inverter board fixed my display right up.  Since this is so common 
with the 17" Apple display, the odds are that is the problem with 
your display too.

Thought I'd make you aware of an option other than pitch the display 
and replace it, or spend $500 to repair it.....

For those who do not feel comfortable doing their own repairs, their 
parent company, <http://www.moniserv.com>, performs flat rate LCD 
display repairs.  In the case of the Apple 17" display, they charge 
$165.

Hope this info helps.....

-- 
Jerry W. Ethington
245 Hawkeegan Drive
Frankfort, KY 40601-3912
(502)223-5489
(502)682-2607 cellular
jethington at mac.com

"Quando omni, flunkus moritati."
(When all else fails, play dead.)
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