| How to repair a HP 100LX, 200LX or 1000CX Palmtop |
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Contents of this page:
Here is the page that many hardware hackers will like: The process of dismantling the palmtop Introduction / where to let the palmtop repair:This page is intended to give you advice if your HP Palmtop is broken.If you want to let your palmtop repair professionally, you have two options:
If you need advice how to repair a palmtop yourself, read on:
Of course I cannot cover
every imaginable defect, so I´ll describe the most common problems and the problems I´ve had myself.
Since HP discontinued the 200LX palmtop, it becomes more and more important to repair broken units, because
it will be difficult to find used units in good shape.
What you will need when doing your first repair job, is advice about opening the palmtop.
I have written an article about
the process of dismantling the palmtop.
There is another source for advice for this: Let's now talk about the actual repairs: Broken latch:
The latch which holds the case closed if you put down the screen lid gets easily broken. What breaks is not the latch itself, but very thin plastic springs that are responsible for the latch to flip into its original position after you pressed it to open the lid.
It is nearly hopeless to try to glue the spring back to the latch. It will break again sooner or later. But there are some ways which enable the latch to work again. 1. Use a piece of a rubber band and sqeeze it into the gap under the latch. Maybe cut ittle triangles out of the rubber band, so that it is not so strong. 2. The solution I chose: A drop of silicone, which is actually used to make tight the gap between your bathtub and the wall, will do the job very nicely. You can use a screw driver to work the silicone into the gap under the latch, Just be sure to wipe away any silicone that remained outside. Let it become hard 12 hours with the latch fixed with adhesive tape or something like that, and voila: You have a working latch again. 3. Also a small piece of foam rubber (abt. 13mm * 8mm and abt. 1-2mm thick) can do the job very effectively. I have one palmtop repaired this way, too. Looks not as ugly as the above solutions and works very well. The hinge crack:
Sometimes the case right above the right hinge of the palmtop breaks due to the strain if you open and close the palmtop frequently. This type of defect is typical for the HP 200LX and appears quite often. It is usually called the "hinge crack". The hinge crack is forced by a hinge that's too tight (See next item!)
Some people simply wait until the crack is wide enough and then
put a little(!) drop of superglue or epoxy glue into the crack. That seems to work if you use very good
glue.
Another attempt of mine was to use "Sachsenkleber": About Sachsenkleber: This is a kind of Cyanacrylate glue which combines the advantages of superglue and a two component glue in one product. It is not available in stores, but you can order Sachsenkleber on the Internet (it is quite expensive, though). It is available at http://www.sachsenkleber.de. And here is my Saxon glue fixed hinge crack:
After a little polishing it now looks much nicer, but it is still visible of course.
After using 2-part epoxy to reglue my broken hinge halves, I test fit the spring to make sure it was going to fit. Use an X-acto knife to smooth out the epoxy that may have entered the inner hinge area. CUT the hinge spring to about 75% of its usual length with a pair of diagonal cutters, so that you do not need a lot of force to compress the black ring onto the plastic hinge halves. Once all of the hinge pieces are in the correct order and in the hole, I used 2-part epoxy to glue the black ring onto the repaired hinge. The epoxy also acted as a "rubbing" dampener, that is, it makes it harder for the display to flop/fall down since the friction of the epoxy in the area of the right hinge against the hinge tube. The epoxy on the outer hinge also makes it harder for the hinge cap to come off and tightly grips the hinge assembly. Once the epoxy is dried, you may have to use an X-acto knife to cut away undesired epoxy that may be blocking the hinge tube from going back into position and/or cut epoxy away from the outer hinge so the hinge cap can slide on. I had to cut the hinge cap open slightly in order to make it slide onto the hinge. The hinge works good. I actually needed a drop of lubricant to loosen it up slightly after this repair. The hinge is too tight or too looseIf either the hinge is too tight (danger of hinge crack) or too loose (screen falls slowly back while you are working), you may be able to fix that (it does not always work!):Remove the cap from the right hinge (only the right hinge contains the mechanics). You can do that by carefully prying it off with the nails of your two thumbs while the screen lid is opened with an angle of 90 degrees to the keyboard.
What you see then is a metal pin in the center and plastic parts around it. The hinge contains of a spring which presses a little plastic cone onto a metal ring (which is on the side you cannot see because it's in the tube). The black plastic you can see directly around the metal pin is the back side of the spring with its plastic anchor. Now you have to adjust the friction of the cone to loose / tighten the hinge. You can do that by using very little amounts of either a lubricant (to loose) or Isopropanol alcohol (to tighten the hinge). Use only a very little drop of the stuff you need and work the hinge a few times by opening and closing the lid. Do not use too much lubricant! It can destroy your palmtop if it flows somewhere else as it is supposed to. However, of the alcohol you can use greater amounts if the hinge is still too loose after the first drop. But some hinges will not at all become tighter, no matter with how much alcohol you flood them. :-( Caution: Some people reported problems with some lubricants which seem to attack the plastic material! And remember: Don't ever take apart the right hinge! The screen: Missing pixels and other problems (and: Doublespeed upgrade!)If you don´ see anything on the screen, as if the batteries were dead, but you know they aren´t, it is most probably not a screen problem. It may be a software problem. Take out all batteries, press the On key for a few seconds, then let the palmtop alone for 24 hours (so all electricity can vanish). Then put the batteries into the palmtop again and see if it works now. If now, it may be an electrical problem.If the screen shows wierd characters on boot-up or if the screen contents are shifted by about two columns to the right and the two left columns show flickering nonsens, the screen is not defective, but your palmtop is double-speed upgraded! To make things look well again you need a driver. If the double-speed upgrade has been installed by Times2Tech, use the driver by Mack Baggette. The following picture shows a typical double-speed-without-driver screen:
It can sometimes be much worse, so that even the characters are not readable anymore. To be sure you have a double-speed upgraded palmtop, you can also enter the self-test mode of the palmtop (only if the screen is readable, otherwise you cannot read the self-test output!) using Esc-On to switch it on instead of just On. Then do the "Timers" test. If the test is not successful, the palmtop is upgraded. (Warning: Never do the RAM-Card test if a flash card is in the slot, this test is only for SRAM cards and can destroy other cards!) If you look through the backup battery tray, you may see if a double-speed crystal is installed. If on the silver cylindrical component behind the tray is written 158 CP52, it is an original single speed palmtop, if you see F31.673, the palmtop has been double-speed upgraded:
If you see nothing written on the crystal, you either have to open the palmtop to read the crystal model number, or run the built-in timer self-test: Press Esc-On to switch the palmtop on, and if you can read the screen well, go to Timers test and press enter to execute it. If it fails (output: time bad), probably a double-speed upgrade is installed. If you cannot read the screen at all due to strange characters, you can be quite sure that a double-speed crystal is installed. Load the above mentioned driver and the screen will be readable again. If lines or blocks of the screen are missing, flickering or black, or if the whole screen is black or white, there may be a defect. There are various typical scenarios which I try to describe here. It heavily depends on the symptoms where you will most probably find the problem:
Some or all keys of the keyboard don´t react anymoreMost likely the pressure contacts which connect the keyboard to the motherboard are not pressed strongly enough against the motherboard. These contacts are placed in the area under the menu key, the right shift key, the zero key and the dot key. Try to press the two parts of the palmtop´s shell together in that area and see if that fixes the problem.If it only fixes it temporarily, you should try to fasten the screw under the plus key (from the bottom of the palmtop). If that also doesn´t help, it may be necessary to clean the keyboard contacts to reduce resistance between the two contact counterparts. For that, you´ll have to open the palmtop. Click here to read how to do that. Be very careful when cleaning the keyboard foil contacts with alcohol or any other solvent. The contacts are build by a thin graphite layer, which is easily rubbed off using solvents. Clean them only once, and with only slight pressure with a soft tissue and some alcohol. Don´t worry about the black stuff rubbed of the contacts: It´s probably no dirt, but the graphite itself. So do not rub until no black stuff is rubbed off anymore! The contacts on the motherboard can be cleaned as usual, using alcohol and a tissue. These contacts are made of copper, so they cannot be rubbed off using a tissue. Other case cracksThe hinge crack is by far the most common crack which appears on the case of the LX. However, there are a few more positions which the case breaks easily at. For example the little plastic "bridge" on the back between the battery cover and the keyboard part of the lower case shell:
I have no idea how this can be fixed the best way. I would try to take the shell apart, put epoxy glue into this crack, wrap it with adhesive tape until the glue is hard, remove the adhesive tape and then reassemble the palmtop. |
| Last Updated on Wednesday, 21 October 2009 |



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