Introducción
Sigue esta guía para reemplazar el panel frontal en una iPad Air 2 Wi-Fi. El panel frontal o pantalla ensamblada consiste de un cristal digitalizador con una pantalla LCD debajo de peste. En la iPad Air 2 Wi-Fi, estas dos partes no vienen por separado y deben ser reemplazadas como una sola pieza.
Dese cuenta que el lector de huellas en el botón de inicio está emparejado a la tarjeta lógica de la iPad. Para mantener el funcionamiento de este botón, deberá transferir el botón original al nuevo ensamble de pantalla.
Este proceso puede corregir casos de cristal digitalizador estrellado, panel táctil que no responda o una pantalla rota.
PELIGRO:El método de aislamiento de la batería en esta guía esta anticuado y podría dar lugar a un daño irreversible en los pines de la placa destinados a ella.Si eliges aislar la batería con este método, toma todas las precauciones posibles y trabaja con extremo cuidado.Si, por el contrario, decides no aislarla; evita todo tipo de herramientas metálicas (Salvo cuando sea estrictamente necesario, como para quitar los tornillos) para prevenir un cortocircuito y dañar los circuitos delicados.
Herramientas
Partes
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Calienta el iOpener durante treinta segundos.
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A lo largo del procedimiento de reparación, en cuanto el iOpener se enfríe, vuelve a calentarlo en el microondas treinta segundos más cada vez.
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Saca el iOpener del microondas, tomándolo por una de las esquinas planas para evitar el centro caliente.
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Llena una olla o cacerola con suficiente agua para sumergir completamente el iOpener.
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Calienta el agua hasta que hierva. Apaga el fuego.
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Coloca un iOpener en el agua caliente durante 2-3 minutos. Asegúrate de que el iOpener esté completamente sumergido en el agua.
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Utiliza unas pinzas para extraer el iOpener calentado del agua caliente.
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Seca bien el iOpener con una toalla.
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Tu iOpener está listo para ser utilizado. Si necesita recalentar el iOpener, calienta el agua hasta que hierva, apaga el fuego y coloca el iOpener en el agua durante 2-3 minutos.
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Si el vidrio de tu pantalla está roto, mantén las roturas contenidas y evita cortes en tu cuerpo encintando el vidrio.
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Aplica capas de cinta de embalar una sobre otra sobre la pantalla del iPad hasta que la cara esté completamente cubierta.
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Haz tu mejor esfuerzo para seguir el resto de la guía como se describe. Sin embargo, cuando el vidrio está roto, seguirá rompiéndose mientras trabajas, y probablemente necesitarás una herramienta de apertura metálica para sacar el vidrio.
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Llevándolo por las pestañas en cada extremo, coloca un iOpener caliente sobre el borde superior del iPad.
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Deja el iOpener sobre el iPad por dos minutos para aflojar el adhesivo que asegura el panel frontal al resto del iPad.
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Mientras sigues las instrucciones, mantén un cuidado especial para evitar abrir en las siguientes áreas:
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Botón de inicio
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Cámara frontal
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Cámara principal
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Coloca una ventosa sobre la cámara frontal del iPad y presiona hacia abajo para crear un vacío.
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Tira firmemente hacia arriba de la ventosa para crear un pequeño espacio entre el panel frontal y la carcasa trasera.
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Cuando hayas abierto una brecha suficiente, inserta una púa de apertura dentro de la brecha para prevenir que el adhesivo vuelva a sellarse.
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Desliza la púa a lo largo del borde de la pantalla, en sentido hacia el jack de auriculares.
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Si aún hay una resistencia considerable cuando deslizas la púa de apertura, repite el proceso de calentado del iOpener y aplica calor adicional.
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Desliza la segunda púa a lo largo del borde superior del iPad, en sentido al Botón de Reposo/Activación.
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Mueve la púa de apertura derecha hacia abajo y alrededor de la esquina superior derecha del iPad.
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Recalienta el iOpener y apóyalo sobre el borde derecho de la pantalla para aflojar el adhesivo que está debajo.
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Desliza la púa de apertura derecha hacia abajo hasta aproximadamente a mitad de camino de la pantalla.
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Desliza la púa de apertura izquierda hacia abajo aproximadamente hasta mitad de camino del borde de la pantalla.
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Desliza la púa de apertura izquierda hacia abajo por el borde de la pantalla hasta que llegues a la esquina.
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Desliza la púa de apertura izquierda a lo largo del borde inferior de la pantalla, luego quítala de la esquina derecha inferior del iPad.
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Ten mucho cuidado de no insertar la púa más de 2 mm por debajo del botón de inicio para evitar dañar el botón.
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Gira la púa restante en la cámara frontal para separar el borde superior de la pantalla de la carcasa posterior.
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Continúa levantando el conjunto de pantalla desde el lado de la cámara frontal.
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Tira la pantalla ligeramente fuera del borde inferior para separarla completamente de la carcasa posterior.
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Sigue levantando hasta que el conjunto de pantalla esté aproximadamente de forma perpendicular al cuerpo del iPad.
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Remueve el único tornillo Phillips de 1.8 mm que asegura los terminales de la batería a sus contactos en la placa lógica.
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Desliza una púa aisladora de baterías debajo del área del conector de la batería de la placa lógica, y déjala en ese lugar mientras trabajas.
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Alternativamente, haz un bloqueador de batería usando una tarjeta de juego y deslízala debajo del conector de la placa lógica para desconectar la batería.
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Remueve los tres tornillos Phillips de 1.3 mm del soporte del cable de la pantalla.
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Quita el soporte.
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Usa una herramienta de apertura de plástico para hacer palanca y sacar el soporte de la parte trasera del botón de inicio.
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Quita el soporte del botón de inicio y despega la cinta conectada a él.
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Raspa todo el adhesivo antiguo que puedas del soporte y límpialo con acetona o alcohol isopropílico de alta concentración (90% o superior).
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Fija el soporte con pegamento termofusible, superglue, o cinta de doble cara superfuerte. Asegúrate de que el soporte está alineado correctamente antes de que se cure el adhesivo, o el botón de inicio no hará click cuando se apriete.
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Usa la parte plana de un spudger para levantar la aleta de retención que hay en el enchufe del botón de inicio.
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Usa la parte plana de un spudger para despegar el cable plano del botón de inicio y el chip de control del TouchID
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Recalienta tu iOpener y hazlo reposar sobre el borde inferior de la pantalla para aflojar el adhesivo en la junta del botón de inicio.
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Usa la punta afilada de un spudger para separar suavemente el ensamblaje del botón de inicio de la pantalla.
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Continúa trabajando con la punta del spudger alrededor de la junta hasta que ésta esté totalmente separada del panel frontal.
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Examina tu parte de reemplazo y tu pantalla original con atención, para asegurarte que coincidan.
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Tu pantalla de reemplazo puede no llevar en sensor de apagado/encendido que es necesario para el uso de la funda Smart Cover. Si quieres mantener el funcionamiento deberás transferir el componente.
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Desuelda las cuatro almohadillas soldadas en la parte inferior izquierda de la pantalla para quitar el cable del conjunto del sensor.
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Para reensamblar tu dispositivo, sigue los pasos en orden inverso.
25 comentarios
What about the part soldered to the display to the left of the home button? It's showcased in step 43 but hidden with black tape then missing in step 44? What is the significants of this component or flex cable...
Where is the transfer of the sleep/wake sensor? its a 4 point solder connection.
Be careful if you replace the home button bracket, many of the replacements do not have the small silver disc that sits in the recess on the inside of the bracket. If you do not transfer this from the old one, the home button will not work as there will be nothing for the home button to press against
I didn't find this to be as hard as I had built it up in my mind to be; HOWEVER, saying that I need to say years ago I was the local Nokia service center in my town. But many years ago right after they got rid of analog times. Yeah. A classic installer/repairer mistake when starting something they haven't fixed or installed before is picking up the instructions, flipping through them; maybe even reading a section that is new-then tossing the instructions over the shoulder. "I got this." This usually comes right before something major gets broke. And I can tell you when you try to do it yourself and then mess it up horribly then take it to the repair shop. Well we called that "I can do it myself" syndrome and charged extra to put back together what they brought in in the box. Now knowing all this - I can't stress this enough because I am stupid, stupid, stupid. COVER YOUR SCREEN IN CLEAR BOXING TAPE AND READ ALL THE INSTRUCTION BELOW THROUGH TO THE END BEFORE EVEN ATTEMPTING THIS FIX. Take my advise.
windizy -
I didn't have an iOpener, so I used a wheat type heat bag. If you do this though, make sure you put a layer of plastic between your Mac and the bag, or you'll get condensation in places you don't want it.
Martin Gray -
I started out using the iOpener but switched to my wife's hairdryer. A heat gun or hair dryer proved to be much more convenient and is a time saviour. You can heat more and the glue becomes more fluid make the next steps with the opening picks much easier
Jan Van Puymbroeck -
I know this is obvious, but backup your iPad with iTunes before you start. I'd also turn off your passcode if you have one.
Laurie Higgins -
Ther first time you heat up the iOpener for this repair when its room temperature I had to heat it up for more than 30 seconds. I remember I had to heat it up for around 45 seconds. However, after that when you need to reheat it again during the repair 30 seconds will be enough.
Yousef Ghalib -
I used the wheat bag in a sensor microwave heating up to 65-70 deg C (155 def F).
ian cheong -
Get yourself a cherry pit bean bag the size of your iPad. Heat it, put the iPad on it for 3 to 5 minutes or so, reheat the cherry pit bean bag, again put your iPad on it. Then heat the iOpener and start working. The cherry pit bean bag will have to be reheated several times, but it will soften the adhesive so you have less problems with the iOpener
Tim Feyaerts -
The heating can be done very effectively (and quickly) with 3d printer heated bed. Make sure the bed is clean. Set the temperature to 60c, (130f ) and put the ipad face down for +/- 10 minutes. Repeat as needed throughout the “gentle prying” stages.
polleyphony -
The iOpener did not work at all for me.
I had to use a heat gun and bring the edges of the case up to ~200 degrees (used an infrared thermometer to measure) before the glue would weaken. This obviously superheated the metal frame, so I also had to wear gloves to handle the phone while prying the back off with the included picks.
Mike Jeanette -
Repair instructions worked like a charm. Had to be patient with the iOpener and getting the screen off. I tried repeatedly without success until shifting the suction cup a bit to the left side where perhaps the glue had loosened up a bit more.
Kyle -
The iOpener, in my opinion, is of no help. Many warnings to say “don’t warm it too much”, but the glue doesn’t melt if not warm enough. As a result, a complete waste of time and energy. In addition, too much liquid in it, so it doesn’t lay on the device on a sufficient surface. I took a hairdryer and it worked much much better.
laurentvidu -
I used an immersion bath to heat this to 180F and applied it to the device until the outside temperature of the opener read 150F with an IR thermometer. Removing the screen took very little force with this method.
breadandbits -
My experience. I was replacing the screen which had been cracked and a little shattered in some places. The iopener is pretty much useless, so was the suction cup. The suction cup would probably be more useful if I was doing something besides the screen. Also you probably want the clean the screen before using it so it can get good suction. I used a hair dryer on high for a couple of minutes at a time (someone on this tread suggested that). I used my exacto knife and a razor blade to get into the adhesive. First the exacto to get the initial cut, then the razor blade to go a little deeper. Could have probably just used the razor blade, but the exacto has a little more finesse. I got the razor blade in and a little under the glass then I used the picks to wedge in. I didn’t want to risk anything using the razor blade too much. Used tape to keep the shattered glass together.
trebor65 -
My experience pt2
Fortunately the shattering was mostly on the edges and most of it had adhesive on the back so it stuck together. Just take your time and work your way around following the guide to get the screen off. Have some goof off or goo be gone to clean the frame when putting the new glass on or putting the existing one back. (someone suggested that also, very good idea). Be careful of the LCD (you should know that). The cable on my LCD was pretty tight, so I propped it up while taking the cable cover off and when I put it back on I did the same thing. I just put a bottle on the battery and leaned the back of the LCD on that while attaching the cables and putting the screws back on the cover. Also be careful with the home button and the bracket on the back of it. I had enough old adhesive on left on the bracket that it stuck back to the new glass fine. So far only 12 hours in, so we will see how that holds up when the kids get at it.
trebor65 -
Another alternative if you do not have the iopener is to use a bed time hotwater bottle. Do not over fill it though. Just put enough hot water in to support the phone while you work around the adhesive.
I use both the hot water bottle and iopener together on Samsung's. It makes life easier
gazza667 -
I followed the directions and heated my iOpener for 30 seconds in a 1000 watt microwave, and it came out at 160 degrees F, as verified by a infrared thermometer. This allowed me to separate the last bit of the back of my Samsung S8, which was already coming off due to a swollen battery (hence the reason for the repair).
Dennis -
Hallo,habe den Akku erfolgreich getauscht.Doch seitdem gibt es bei Telefonaten eine Rückkopplung für den anrufenden.Bei mir ist alles normal.Woran liegt das?Mfg
Manu R -
If you follow these instructions, you will crack your screen like I did. Heating the iOpener for 30 seconds, using it to melt glue, then waiting 10 minutes to reheat is useless. The iOpener can be used to maybe warm the glue on whatever side you aren’t working on. You need a hairdryer and/or a heat gun to melt the glue and separate the glass from the iPad.
Anyone want to buy an old iPad with broken glass and a dead battery?
mpulliam -
Not everybody has a microwave. You should provide a target temperature for the iOpener and instructions for a conventional oven, or pot of warm water, or whatever. Although I will probably use a heat gun …
Esmond Pitt -
Three times heating opener and no luck. Tried pressing down gently on opener with a towel, and the opener broke. Wondering if I now replace table mats, fancy table cloth, etc. or will this stuff wash out.
Not impressed so far. Maybe the hair dryer next.
doug -
I support the comments about the iOpener. Everyone has a hair drier, FHS, so get a cheap IR thermometer (£18) and blow heat until the area is 60+ deg C. Still takes w while, and getting the screen off is v scary, but just add more heat if you feel resistance.
The rest of the kit is good, esp the magnetic screwdrivers.
Richard O'Brien -
No, everyone does not have a hairdryer. Some of us don’t even have hair. Thank goodness I already had an IR thermometer, though.
nin10doh -
#### WARNUNG WENN MINIMALSTER SPRUNG IM DISPLAY IST FUNKTIONERT DAS NICHT!!! ######
Hatte einen winzigen, minimalen Sprung im Display. Ich dachte es könnte gehen, weil der Sprung “abgeschlossen” war. Er hat in einer Ecke ein winzige Glasteil rausgeschnitten. NEIN! Geht nicht. Habe alles mit viel Geduld dem iOpener und einem Föhn erhitzt. Es ist trotzdem sofort über das komplette Display zersprungen…
T z -
I’ve started with iOpener but changed very quickly to a heatgun. That was more efficient.
Mizzoo, s.r.o. -
I could not get the iOpener hot enough to melt the glue on my ipad 6. I heated for 45 seconds once and it was boiling and it still never worked. Thank goodness contributors mentioned using a hair dryer. Using an 1700w hair dryer on high did the trick to get the screen off. Still took some time and the case got pretty hot but be patient. It took twice as long and a lot more patience to get the battery out.
Randal Haufler -
I have an Ipad with touch screen issue, if i replace this part it should be Ok?
janderson martin -
WARNING - DO NOT MICROWAVE ON A METAL MICROWAVE RACK
The metal microwave rack can heat up and melt through the iOpener cover letting the contents leak out.
Not a big issue for me as I have a heat gun and used that instead.
Run Up A Tree -
I opened my iPad with the iOpener. Be patient! It may take quite a bit longer to it the iOpener in the microwave than it says in the guide. My microwave can only do 800W and I had to put the iOpener in several times (maybe a total of 90-120 seconds). I recommend that you have the transparent side up an watch the bag carefully. As long a the bag doesn't bloat up and the liquid doesn't start bubbling you should be fine. But I recommend to take the iO out from time to time to check it. (More comments in Step 6.)
marcelflueeler -
I gave upon the I opener and used a hairdryer. (Fixed an iPad 6)
Tom Weber -
iPad mini gen5. I used the iOpener. My microwave is 1200w with carousel. 30 sec got the iOpener to 155ºF. For the 2nd heating, after 10 minutes sitting, the temp was still around 125º so I only cooked it for 15 sec. Not enough increase so +5 sec more which me to 165-170ºF. This should be considered ballpark info because who knows the real output of the various microwaves and the quality of the IR tool used to determine temp.
To successfully open my iPad mini I applied the iOpener twice to the left edge and twice to bottom. & once to R edge. Using the suction cup was difficult for me (I'm in my 70's so my hands don't work too well anymore). I had trouble holding the guitar pick and slipping them in (at an downward angle). In the end, sliding my thumbnail along the edge opened it very slightly and allowed the pick to get into the gap. I marked the ends of all my picks with a sharpie pen for the recommended 2mm insertion to avoid going in too deep. To get the screen open it took me approx 1 hour.
jharrison -