Collection How to Repair ASUS Laptop

1. Fix Your Laptop With a Hammer


When the screws holding the hinge to the screen in my laptop gave up the ghost, I needed a quick fix. A little tack acting as a rivet does the trick.


Step 1: Remove Bezel



I won't go into too much detail on how to remove the bezel. Every laptop is a bit diffrent, so round up the tools appropriate for yours. I will say that an old knife with the tip ground off makes a great tool for opening up plastic casings.

In the first photo you can see the broken hinge, normally that metal plate is captive between an inner plastic frame and the bezel. There is a lot of torque on the hinge when opening it and when the screw failed it resulted in the bezel breaking.


Step 2: Hammer Time!




Drill 1/8" holes through the hinge and the back of the laptop. I reused the holes that the screws came out of, and left the plastic frame behing the hinge as well. The frame maintains the alignment of the screen, so even if it's not doing much for the hinge, I don't want the screen moving around.

Next insert the tacks from the back of the screen through the holes you just made. It is a tight fit, so use a nut driver or socket as a hollow punch to drive the hinge down over the tack.

Once the tack is flush with the back of the screen, use a punch to fold the tip over or peen it to lock everything in place.


Step 3: Revel in the Renewed Hinge!



Pop everything back together (reinstall bezel) and you're set!

I think the fix came out nicely. Adds a bit of contrast to the back of the machine if you're into that sort of thing, and works just fine regardless of aesthetics.

source: https://www.instructables.com/id/Fix-Your-Laptop-With-A-Hammer/

2. Screen won turn on after thermal paste replacement ASUS ROG GL503VD Laptop
asyx:
Decided to replace the thermal paste on my laptop and followed a guide on youtube, pretty much did the exact same thing he did except mine didnt worked, the system runs but the screen doesnt show anything. so far i tried removing the battery and pressing the power button but it doesn't work for me any ideas what i can do

webworkings:
The battery wouldn't effect the display.

When you took it apart it is completely possible that you knocked the cable that connects the display, at either end, loose, or that the display cable got pinched or damaged. So that is where I would start. Check the cable.

Should that not do it, then recheck where you changed the thermal paste (you didn't actually say where).

Now, if the problem was the display not working right before you changed the paste, then changing it wouldn't have fixed it. In that case you may just have a fried GPU. Try the following (after the above)...


  1. Turn the laptop off (not sleep or hibernate but off).
  2. Connect an external monitor to the laptop.
  3. Turn on the external monitor.
  4. Turn on the laptop.

NOTE: You may have to press an "external monitor" button. Could be the f4 button or a button with two monitors on it, for the external monitor to work.

If you can see fine on the external monitor, then your attached display, or the ribbon cable that connects it, are your problem.

If you can't see on the external monitor at all, or the problem occurs on the external monitor as well, then it is probably the graphics card/GPU that is the problem, which may require the motherboard be replaced.

You may also want to try hitting CTRL + SHIFT + WIN + B to try and reset your graphics driver as another possible fix.


asyx:
So i took off the fans and i cleaned the old thermal paste and applied a small amount of thermal paste. i dont think i did that part wrong. i dont see any ribbon cable in my laptop. idk which one is the cable that connects to the screen, also i did hook it up to an external monitor (hdmi) didn't work. i doubt anything is fried though since i there is no indication of anything getting burnt


webworkings:
A GPU, if gone bad, doesn't have to look burnt.

The cable would be connected from the motherboard to the display.


asyx:
It was working completely fine before i changed the thermal paste...
what can i do right now, i want to get it fixed asap but i dont want to wait 7 days just to get asus to diagnose whats wrong with my laptop and telling me to replace my motherboard ( they have really bad CS in here)


webworkings:

If the laptop isn't under warranty any longer (which opening it up and replacing the paste yourself would have voided any warranty) then you can take it to them or any local tech. However, as I said, just because you only intended to do anything on, and only worked on, one or two things does not mean nothing else was effected. All it takes is snagging something while working, a shock (even a teeny one) to the system, pinching a cable or wiring, I could go on and on. There is no simple "oh just do this" option. Especially since you said the external monitor shows nothing either. It needs to be looked at.

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