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This teardown is not a repair guide. To repair your LED Birne 230V, use our service manual.

  1. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Diffuser: step 1, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Diffuser: step 1, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Diffuser: step 1, image 3 of 3
    • Carefully cut and pry with razor blades between the diffuser and body of light bulb.

    • Diffuser is sealed onto body of bulb.

  2. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Body without Diffuser: step 2, image 1 of 2 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Body without Diffuser: step 2, image 2 of 2
    • 15 LEDs spread in ring.

  3. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Cross section of body: step 3, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Cross section of body: step 3, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Cross section of body: step 3, image 3 of 3
    • Filing into the side of the bulb.

    • Top layer is circuit board.

    • V-shaped metal is casing about 1mm thick.

  4. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Circuit Board: step 4, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Circuit Board: step 4, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Removing Circuit Board: step 4, image 3 of 3
    • With open gap circuit board can be removed.

    • Attached with wire and resistor to base of bulb.

    • Release clips to release wires.

  5. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Capacitor: step 5, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Capacitor: step 5, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Capacitor: step 5, image 3 of 3
    • Capacitor is removed as previous wires in Step 4 were removed.

    • Capacitor is 10 mircoFarads.

  6. LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Resistor: step 6, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Resistor: step 6, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, Remove Resistor: step 6, image 3 of 3
    • Resistor removed by popping of bottom cap.

    • Resistor is 4.7 ohms.

  7. LED Light Bulb Teardown, All Parts: step 7, image 1 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, All Parts: step 7, image 2 of 3 LED Light Bulb Teardown, All Parts: step 7, image 3 of 3
    • Parts laid out and details.

Wieli

Member since: 01/08/23

1,707 Reputation

10 Guides authored

3 Comments

I'm curious, if anyone has taken apart enough failed LED light bulbs to discover if there is a trend in what part fails first. This would be interesting if it is a component that can potentially be replaced. A buck or less to get more life out of a $10 bulb seems like a good trade off!

jaeckerb - Reply

I've wondered the same thing myself. It seems likely that it would be a failing capacitor or possibly one of the LED's in a series circuit, where if one fails they all go off or flash as the failing LED works, heats up, fails, cools down, works again, and repeat) as often failed LED bulbs do.

Mike Klingler - Reply

Diode usually. you can take your meter and on both sides of each diode test each individually when it lights up u know that one is bad. pop bad led off with pick and take lead out of graphite pencil shaving on circuitry and/or. little drop of super glue to allow it to bond and test again light should be fixed.... easier done then explained lol.... god bless.

CryptoCros - Reply

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