![]() ![]() Paul on Enzymes Make Electricity From Thin Air.john on 27 Litres And 12 Cylinders, With A Practical Station Wagon Body.ytrewq on Probably The Most Over-Specified Calculator To Ever Be Manufactured.Murray on Cornell Updates Their MCU Course For The RP2040.spaceminions on What’s Going To Happen To Legacy Broadcast Bands When The Lights Go Out?.David Wolfe on What’s Going To Happen To Legacy Broadcast Bands When The Lights Go Out?.Peter on 27 Litres And 12 Cylinders, With A Practical Station Wagon Body.New Raspberry Pi Camera With Global Shutter 27 Comments Posted in Repair Hacks Tagged Asus, button, monitor, stuck, switch, vw202 Post navigation A quick cleaning with a cotton swab removed the debris and got the tactile switch working again. Inside he found that a bit of metal particulate (leftovers from manufacturing?) were causing the problem. Once the PCB which hosts the buttons was removed, he took the metal housing off of the broken switch. The plastic bezel has little spring tabs all around it that must be gently pried apart. We just unstuck the offender and vowed not to press that button again, but actually figured out how to disassemble and repair the PCB mount switches.Īs with most consumer electronics these days the worst part of the process is getting the monitor’s case apart. We already cracked ours open and realized that the buttons are not easily replaced (you’ve got to source the right one). has the same monitor we do, an ASUS VW202, and had the same problem of stuck buttons. ![]() Here’s one that will let us fix our borked ASUS computer monitor buttons. One of the perks of writing for Hackaday is that we often find hacks that we’ve been meaning to do ourselves. ![]()
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