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Turn monitor over on
a towel
and remove 8 screws (3 on each side and 2 on the bottom). |
There's three
different sizes. You can come back to this pic to see which ones go
where. |
Use a small flat
head screwdriver or a knife and carefully pry open off the back
cover. |
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It helps to have
more than one. |
With the cover off
use a needle-nose pliers to pull over the speaker wire. |
Now you need to
release the two ribbon cables (left and bottom). |
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For the left cable,
pull the locking lever up (it's hinged) to release the cable. For the bottom cable, slide the black
locking clamp back evenly (not one side at a time). |
After you carefully
remove the LCD module, you need to remove the 3 screws on the bottom
of the
bezel to remove the button strip. |
And remove the two
screws securing the thin circuit board and remove the circuit board. |
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Take the thin
circuit board from the last step and place it in the bezel so the
screw holes line up. |
Then secure it with
the 2 screws. |
Place the bluetooth antenna in the
same location on the thin circuit board. |
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Place the LCD module on the bezel. |
Make sure the ribbon cable isn't under
the LCD and that the LCD isn't on top of the brass metal ground
(it's on top of the thin circuit board). It has to touch the side of
the LCD's case. |
Place the ribbon cable in the socket. |
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And push the locking lever down. |
Place the bottom ribbon cable in the
socket and push the locking clamp in. |
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Cut a notch in the back cover. |
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PAC IR-X (infrared repeater) was used to extend the IR receiver.
Just secure the IR sensor to the back of the alpine bezel using the
zip-ties. Make sure the sensor (the small end of the black cable at
the top of this pic) is facing the alpine IR sersor. |
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Then put the back cover on. |
Secure the button strip on the back
cover with either double-sided tape or a hot glue gun. The IR
receiver should be facing up. |
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