Repairing Remotes

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • GadgetmaNZ
    New Member
    • Feb 2013
    • 6
    • New Zealand

    #1

    Repairing Remotes

    I wrote this Instructable a while ago and it is on top of the Google search after Youtube links,
    https://www.instructables.com/id/Rep...mote-controls/
  • bigdozer
    Member
    • Jan 2011
    • 46
    • USA

    #2
    Re: Repairing Remotes

    Great write up. I've done this many times.

    Comment

    • mariushm
      Badcaps Legend
      • May 2011
      • 3799

      #3
      Re: Repairing Remotes

      Nothing about getting buttons working again? Any way to put some of that conductive material back on the soft plastic of the buttons?

      Comment

      • SIDMX
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2010
        • 165
        • Mexico

        #4
        Re: Repairing Remotes

        Originally posted by mariushm
        Nothing about getting buttons working again? Any way to put some of that conductive material back on the soft plastic of the buttons?
        I haven't used any of these but read somewhere that it can be done using "Conductive Silver Pen" or "Bare Conductive".

        Comment

        • kc8adu
          Super Moderator
          • Nov 2003
          • 8829
          • U.S.A!

          #5
          Re: Repairing Remotes

          i repaired a keypad in a kenwood th-75a ht with defogger grid repair.
          called quickgrid by loctite.
          so far its fine.
          if you clean the keypad in a remote,ht keypad,ect use only soap and hot water.
          strong solvents take off the conductive coating.probably what happened to the kenwood.

          Comment

          • ratdude747
            Black Sheep
            • Nov 2008
            • 17136
            • USA

            #6
            Re: Repairing Remotes

            Moved out of site suggestion.
            sigpic

            (Insert witty quote here)

            Comment

            • Longbow
              Badcaps Veteran
              • Jun 2011
              • 623
              • USA

              #7
              Re: Repairing Remotes

              Since you asked, here are the problems most often encountered with simple remotes. We'll forget about the programmable touch screen do-everything remotes for now. From most likely to least likely:

              1) Dead batteries, use of rechargeable batteries (insufficient voltage), batteries inserted backwards, broken battery terminals, corroded batteries and associated corrosion damage to pc board.

              2) Loose parts on pcb such as loose crystals and CR's, loose IR diodes, pulled up traces, other loose connections, etc.

              3) Worn out carbon contact surface on rubber buttons. Volume up/down and channel up/down will be the most likely. Repair is tricky and a number of temporary fixes can be tried. Nothing guaranteed.

              4) IR emitter diode burned out (faulty).

              5) Remote has been accidentally set to an alternate control channel, or main unit has been set to a child-lockout mode.

              6) All other mystery problems that might include a faulty remote IC or other unusual failed part.

              7) Remote is OK. Remote receiver is faulty.
              Is it plugged in?

              Comment

              • redwire
                Badcaps Legend
                • Dec 2010
                • 3900
                • Canada

                #8
                Re: Repairing Remotes

                The funniest remote fix I did, I asked the guy if anything happened to it, "yeah I had a fight with my wife and threw the remote at her, it hit the brick fireplace"...

                I find the main problems are:

                1. Loose connection on pcb, usually battery holders/led.
                2. Spilt something/food in the remote
                3. Worn conductive keypad

                I gut the remote and throw it in dishsoap and water, and clean them up with a toothbrush, and then compressed air to dry them.
                For bad keys I use, rubber keypad repair kit but it's expensive.

                Comment

                • lti
                  Badcaps Legend
                  • May 2011
                  • 2544
                  • United States

                  #9
                  Re: Repairing Remotes

                  The only problems I've seen with remotes were dirty or bad button contacts and random loss of programming on universal remotes.

                  Comment

                  • japlytic
                    Badcaps Legend
                    • Oct 2005
                    • 2085
                    • Australia

                    #10
                    Re: Repairing Remotes

                    One time, I had a client where some functions for the TV would not work with the original remote, and I pointed out to the client that it was a universal remote becuase it can also operate other devices of the same brand.
                    My first choice in quality Japanese electrolytics is Nippon Chemi-Con, which has been in business since 1931... the quality of electronics is dependent on the quality of the electrolytics.

                    Comment

                    • redwire
                      Badcaps Legend
                      • Dec 2010
                      • 3900
                      • Canada

                      #11
                      Re: Repairing Remotes

                      MG Chemicals Rubber Keypad Repair kit 8339, $30 "Guaranteed to work over 500,000 keystrokes under normal using conditions" - didn't last a year

                      Their "pure silver" is mostly silver colour and rubbed off onto the PCB. The dispensers dried up, so....

                      Any other suggestions for repairing remote buttons?
                      Attached Files

                      Comment

                      • stj
                        Great Sage 齊天大聖
                        • Dec 2009
                        • 30910
                        • Albion

                        #12
                        Re: Repairing Remotes

                        wipe them with pure IPA, the thin shiny top-layer comes off leaving them working with a nice matt finish again.

                        and check the soldering on the resonator and make sure neither of the leads has snapped at the resonator casing - pretty common if they arent glued down

                        Comment

                        • Chungalin
                          Badcaps Veteran
                          • Jul 2014
                          • 422
                          • Spain

                          #13
                          Re: Repairing Remotes

                          If after cleaning rubber pad with water and soap there're buttons that aren't still working (and it's not due to failing traces on PCB) I usually fix it by rubbing hot soldering iron tip for some seconds. Remove excess of solder from tip before proceding and re-tin afterwards.

                          I do this on most used buttons (power, volume up/down, program up/down, menu, ok...). It evaporates silicone oil that has resisted soap cleaning. Improvement is immediate, but I'm still experiencing how long it lasts. I've had some returns after a few months...

                          Over years I've tried other methods, like silver paint or gluing aluminium foil patches. None of these lasts long. Aluminium patches get loose when new silicone oil builds up from the rubber.

                          More remote issues: if you shake the remote PCB near your ear and hear a subtle rattle noise from the resonator, it'll be damaged for sure. They're weak to remote falling to floor.

                          Sometimes battery leaks go under IC and produce intermitent failures. I detect it by heating some legs of the IC with solder tip. If after a second you hear some frying crackle from underneath IC, even some bubbles within legs, then some thorough cleaning is required.

                          Some cheap remotes have bridges between copper traces that are made of carbon, like the contacts. If these bridges are near a place that can suffer from battery leaks, they'll be very likely weakened and develop high resistance, specially on the point where they make contact with copper. Replace them by soldering wire bridges.

                          Comment

                          • redwire
                            Badcaps Legend
                            • Dec 2010
                            • 3900
                            • Canada

                            #14
                            Re: Repairing Remotes

                            There's no conductive rubber on the Sony TV remote keypads, just some conductive paint they use. That's why they don't last, cheap stuff. I might glue a thin piece of conductive rubber on the keys.
                            I also found a bypass cap installed backwards. 47uF doesn't mind -3V must be china's revenge

                            Comment

                            • stj
                              Great Sage 齊天大聖
                              • Dec 2009
                              • 30910
                              • Albion

                              #15
                              Re: Repairing Remotes

                              why not put those metal discs under the buttons that flip inside-out when you press them.

                              Comment

                              • redwire
                                Badcaps Legend
                                • Dec 2010
                                • 3900
                                • Canada

                                #16
                                Re: Repairing Remotes

                                Follow up- I found a better way to repair remote control keypads.

                                The MG Chemicals remote control repair kit did not last. The conductive silver paint just rubbed off as the first two pics show.

                                What I did is glue conductive plastic, AKA Velostat/Linqstat to the buttons. Got a small piece on eBay.
                                Velostat is a carbon impregnated black polyethylene film, paper thin 4mils. Used for ESD bags. But glue does not stick to it at all. I had to use two-part cyanoacrylate.

                                After the glue dried, I used side-cutters and trimmed each piece.

                                To disassemble this Sony remote (RM-YD029), do not pry the silver side-trim out at all. It has interlocking fingers between the top+bottom pieces.
                                You have to pry the top and bottom clamshell apart using a metal guitar pick. Start at the mini keypad end and work to the other end.

                                Hope this works for others.
                                Attached Files

                                Comment

                                • redwire
                                  Badcaps Legend
                                  • Dec 2010
                                  • 3900
                                  • Canada

                                  #17
                                  Re: Repairing Remotes

                                  OK so that repair did not last long. The problem is no glue really sticks to polyethylene and the pads fell off.

                                  Next, I tried a USD $7 rubber pad kit from fleaBay "keypad repair KIT for IR remote controllers - 100pcs conductive pads ,1.5mm~10mm"

                                  These glue onto the keypad, I used silicone glue, you can trim excess off after it's dried using small side-cutters. Hard part is just using a tiny bit of glue and keepiong it centered and squished a little (put a weight on it) until it dries.
                                  The key travel is much less now - but it works for years now.
                                  Attached Files

                                  Comment

                                  • sam_sam_sam
                                    Badcaps Legend
                                    • Jul 2011
                                    • 6018
                                    • USA

                                    #18
                                    Re: Repairing Remotes

                                    Originally posted by redwire
                                    I tried a USD $7 rubber pad kit from fleaBay "keypad repair KIT for IR remote controllers - 100pcs conductive pads ,1.5mm~10mm"

                                    These glue onto the keypad, I used silicone glue, you can trim excess off after it's dried using small side-cutters. Hard part is just using a tiny bit of glue and keepiong it centered and squished a little (put a weight on it) until it dries.
                                    The key travel is much less now - but it works for years now.
                                    Thanks for posting this

                                    Comment

                                    • Agent24
                                      I see dead caps
                                      • Oct 2007
                                      • 4913
                                      • New Zealand

                                      #19
                                      Re: Repairing Remotes

                                      The most confusing remote repair I did was on my Sony STR-DE545 amplifier.


                                      The remote stopped controlling the amplifier.

                                      The remote had a red LED on it to show when commands were being transmitted. The LED was not working. I straight away assumed the remote was bad and not sending any commands to the Red indicator LED OR the IR LEDs.

                                      I opened the remote and found the Red LED had cracked solder joints. I reflowed it and it began working. I then checked the IR with a webcam and found they were also working. So I had tricked myself with the non-working indicator LED... the IR transmitters were working all along!

                                      It turned out the IR receiver in the amplifier was dead. I replaced it with a generic one from Jaycar and modified some decoupling capacitor values to match the datasheet otherwise the new receiver was unstable. Still works great now!
                                      "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                      -David VanHorn

                                      Comment

                                      Related Topics

                                      Collapse

                                      • LEEDASH
                                        Aiwa TX-110 Tuner Buttons
                                        by LEEDASH
                                        Hello all, Aiwa TX-110 Tuner got out of storage and the buttons was held in by some gloop, What glue would you use to restick these buttons (they are no snapped off)

                                        Thank you
                                        05-07-2024, 02:41 PM
                                      • subwagon
                                        Repairing or replacing an LMB202E LCD Display
                                        by subwagon
                                        Hello everyone, I'm in the process of repairing a tabletop air cleaner, but am having difficulty repairing a failing LCD display.

                                        3 years ago I ran a soldering iron over the ribbon cable and got the entire display to come back to life. Unfortunately it gradually failed again but this time I wasn't so lucky at getting it to revive with heat.

                                        I believe that I may have gotten the ribbon too hot this time, so I'm looking for an alternative to an LMB202E. Unfortunately I am not having much luck. I did find an LMB202A, LMB202C, and LMB202D but I'm afraid the pin outs are...
                                        10-27-2023, 01:39 PM
                                      • h0m3w0rk
                                        Repairing a Music Store Professional GO! SUB 18A
                                        by h0m3w0rk
                                        Hello everyone,

                                        I'm working on repairing a Music Store Professional GO! SUB 18A bass subwoofer, and I need some help troubleshooting an issue with the power amplifier board. The board uses an IR2153 driver and originally had two SLW20N50C MOSFETs. Unfortunately, these MOSFETs burned out. I replaced them with two TK20J60W MOSFETs; however, these also failed almost immediately.

                                        Here are some details:
                                        • SLW20N50C (original):
                                          • Rated for 500 V
                                          • Typical RDS(ON): 0.21 Ω
                                          • Continuous Drain Current: 20 A at 25°C (13 A at 100°C)
                                          • Pulsed Drain Current: 80 A
                                          • Avalanche
                                        ...
                                        02-27-2025, 07:42 AM
                                      • pastapoulos
                                        Repairing GIGABYTE RTX 3070 TI GAMING OC 8GB Rev.1.0
                                        by pastapoulos
                                        Hi everyone,

                                        I picked up this non-working graphics card with the intent of repairing it. I don't know the details of its failure, but the card is in near-perfect cosmetic condition. It had never been opened before I started working on it.

                                        During my inspection, I didn't spot any obvious physical damage. However, when testing, I discovered the PCIe 12V line was open. I replaced the blown fuse and rechecked the measurements—no short circuits on the main lines.

                                        When I tested the card in a system, it prevented the PC from booting. I checked the main voltages,...
                                        11-22-2024, 08:57 AM
                                      • cheeky2
                                        Help with identifying missing resistor from JVC push buttons TV3024-ZC10-01(C)
                                        by cheeky2
                                        Someone previously had damaged a couple of the push buttons who has whilst pushing them in pushed off a smd resistor from a JVC 40" LED TV LT-40C550 main board MSDV3255-ZC01.
                                        The missing resistor off the push control buttons TV3024-ZC10-01(C) pcb is R06 see the pictures.
                                        I have tried downloading manuals for the Haier manufactured main board however they don't include the schematic for the push buttons!
                                        So if anyone has the pcb that could measure the resistance or have a schematic diagram for it would be much appreciated.
                                        Thanks ...
                                        01-20-2022, 01:35 PM
                                      • Loading...
                                      • No more items.
                                      Working...