LCD Display Backlight Architecture
The backlight circuits in TV's with an LCD share a common architecture:
- A power chip generates the backlight signal.
- An inductor, commonly called the “backlight coil," amplifies the signal.
- A diode prevents reverse voltage.
- A ferrite bead filters the signal.
- A ribbon cable carries the signal to the backlight LED strip.
- Some devices have an additional backlight driver chip.
What Causes TV Backlight to Fail?
Most hardware operates at voltages between 1.8 V - 5.2 V. However, the backlight circuit operates at about 15 - 20 V. At this higher voltage, the backlight components are more prone to damage when a short circuit occurs. The high voltage backlight circuit is also prone to corrosion from water damage.
The Most Common Causes of Display Failures
- The LCD screen - LCD failure can occur from drop damage, water damage, or it can simply be the result of a defective part.
- The backlight filter - When a short in the backlight circuit occurs, the thin wire inside the filter breaks, severing power from the backlight LEDs.
- The backlight diode - Like the backlight filters, the backlight diode is a fragile component. In cases where a backlight filter is particularly burned up, you’ll often find that the diode has failed as well. Diode failure in the absence of filter damage is rare, but it can happen.
The inductor coil is rarely the point of failure in modern devices.
Backlight Short Circuits
The most common cause of a self-induced short occurs from working on the device with the battery still connected. Even when the screen is dark, there is voltage in the backlight circuit. A slipped pair of tweezers or misalignment of the LCD connector can short the backlight circuit to ground. Avoid self-induced shorts by always disconnecting the battery before working on a device.
Another cause of backlight shorts is faulty assembly procedures. During device fabrication, these solder joints are protected by piece of black tape—however, during the screen refurbishing process some manufacturers neglect to replace the tape, apply it misaligned, or fail to apply it securely. As a result, the screen initially works during testing—but once the metal LCD shield is installed, the exposed solder joints touch the grounded frame, shorting the backlight circuit.
Backlight shorts can occur when the latch for the ZIF connector securing the LCD flex is missing. The LCD flex slides out an angle and the high voltage backlight pin contacts the ground pin, causing a short circuit.
Other Common Causes of Backlight Failure
Water damage is a frequent source of backlight problems. Water will corrode the LCD connector pin/pad junction, which breaks the electrical path to the connector and can damage the filter.
Backlight circuit failure can also occur from damage to the electrical traces on the circuit board. If the electrical traces buried in the board are inadvertently severed—for example, from trying to fasten the board with too large a screw—the backlight circuit will not conduct power to the backlight LEDs.
Diagnosing a Backlight Failure
To diagnose whether your device is “dead” or just has a malfunctioning screen, try connecting it to your computer. If the computer recognizes the device, then the problem probably resides with the LCD screen or backlight circuit.
The good news is that nearly all backlight failures are repairable. Once the damaged component is identified it can simply be replaced. Follow this Samsung Television Backlight Replacement guide for more details.
References
This content is almost entirely sourced from Reed Danis and his iPhone/iPad Backlight Troubleshooting page. Users were finding this content when searching for TV related backlight issues so we repurposed it for TV.
5 Comments
On my Hisense Roku tv my screen is black but the red power light still works so power is on what do I do?
Alvinryanjameson - Reply
Replace the backlight driver capacitors. These will be near where the LED strips plug into the main PCB and will be of a higher voltage value like 100uF @ 100v or something. These caps see alot of load and heat if the TV set is used alot. They go out of spec and cause the backlight power supply not to function or they cannot hold capacity to drive the LEDs. The factor stock caps tend to be cheap and low tier so you want to replace with a better quality like nichicon and get the correct uF value but you can get higher voltage just not lower voltage that what is there already.
Adriel Elfnet (ENCI) -
Actually the LED backlights operate anywhere from 12 - 72 volts with several backlight strips in series on one or more power channels with current limitation. Also some use PWM to adjust brightness with changes in the program image on screen. Each LED on a strip will have a lens over it that directs the light back onto a white backing instead of straight out in front.
Adriel Elfnet (ENCI) - Reply
Dead LED TV sets LED strips can be repurposed to be used as 12 volt LED lighting for backup power, in RV and campers, in a vehicle, etc. Typical each LED on a strip are 3.2 - 3.8 volts, however in some bigger TV sets (60+ inches) each LED can be 4.5 - 7.2 volts. So if you know how to use a soldering iron and how to cut & modify the traces on the strips you can repurpose the LED strips in that dead TV set.
Adriel Elfnet (ENCI) - Reply
How much will all this cost?
Jermaine “Maine” Dotson - Reply