How to Fix a Stuck Pixel on an LCD Monitor

April 3, 2009

how_to_fix_a_stuck_pixel

Got a stuck pixel on your LCD mon­i­tor? You might be able to fix it! I found an excel­lent arti­cle that teaches you how to fix a stuck pixel on your LCD mon­i­tor. There are three meth­ods: soft­ware, pres­sure and tap­ping. Let me know if any of these tips have worked for you by com­ment­ing below.

If your LCD screen has a stuck or dead pixel (a point on the screen that is always lit or always dark), it is usu­ally due to a tran­sis­tor mal­func­tion or uneven dis­tri­b­u­tion of liq­uid in the liq­uid crys­tal dis­play (TFT LCD). This can often be fixed.

Steps

Software Method

  1. Try run­ning pixel fix­ing soft­ware (see Sources and Citations). Stuck pix­els can often be re-energized by rapidly turn­ing them on and off. If this fails, com­plete the fol­low­ing steps.

Pressure Method

  1. Turn off your computer’s monitor.
  2. Get your­self a damp wash­cloth, so that you don’t scratch your screen.
  3. Take a house­hold pen, pen­cil, screw­driver, or some other sort of instru­ment with a focused, but rel­a­tively dull, point. A very good tool would be a PDA stylus.
  4. Fold the wash­cloth to make sure you don’t acci­den­tally punc­ture it and scratch the screen.
  5. Apply pres­sure through the folded wash­cloth with the instru­ment to exactly where the stuck pixel is. Try not to put pres­sure any­where else, as this may make more stuck pixels.
  6. While apply­ing pres­sure, turn on your com­puter and screen.
  7. Remove pres­sure and the stuck pixel should be gone. This works as the liq­uid in the liq­uid crys­tal has not spread into each lit­tle pixel. This liq­uid is used with the back­light on your mon­i­tor, allow­ing dif­fer­ent amounts of light through, which cre­ates the dif­fer­ent colors.

Tapping Method

  1. Turn on the com­puter and LCD screen.
  2. Display a black image, which will show the stuck pixel very clearly against the back­ground. (It is very impor­tant that you are show­ing a black image and not just a blank sig­nal, as you need the back­light­ing of the LCD to be illu­mi­nat­ing the back of the panel).
  3. Find a pen with a rounded end. A Sharpie marker with the cap on should be fine for this.
  4. Use the rounded end of the pen to gen­tly tap where the stuck pixel is – not too hard to start with, just enough to see a quick white glow under the point of con­tact. If you didn’t see a white glow, then you didn’t tap hard enough, so use just slightly more pres­sure this time.
  5. Start tap­ping gen­tly. Increase the pres­sure on the taps grad­u­ally for 5-10 taps until the pixel rights itself.
  6. Display a white image (an empty text doc­u­ment is good for this) to ver­ify that you haven’t acci­den­tally caused more dam­age than you fixed.

Tips

  • If the pres­sure and tap­ping don’t work directly on the stuck pixel, start mov­ing out­ward around the stuck pixel. If you see the pixel flicker while doing this then you know where you can focus the pres­sure and tap­ping tech­niques rather than directly on the pixel.
  • Many peo­ple report suc­cess with this tech­nique but these instruc­tions won’t work in every case. It may take a few attempts to make sure you are press­ing exactly on the stuck pixel.
  • These instruc­tions will fix “stuck” pix­els, not “dead” ones. Dead pix­els appear black while stuck pix­els can be one con­stant color like red, blue or green.
  • An alter­na­tive, but sim­i­lar tech­nique involves gen­tly mas­sag­ing the stuck pixel with a warm damp (not wet) soft cloth.
  • Alternative tech­nique to tap­ping: Using a rounded pen­cil eraser, push with mod­er­ate pres­sure into screen at stuck pixel.
  • If these instruc­tions don’t work, you can hope­fully get the mon­i­tor replaced through your man­u­fac­turer. If your mon­i­tor falls under the spec­i­fi­ca­tions of replace­ment, get in con­tact with the man­u­fac­turer to set up replace­ment plans.

Warnings

  • Do not attempt to open the mon­i­tor as it will void the war­ranty and the man­u­fac­turer will not replace it.
  • Make sure you don’t get any elec­tri­cal equip­ment wet or it may break.
  • Some peo­ple claim that touch­ing the screen can cause more pix­els to become stuck, although this has not been proven.
  • LCD Displays are com­posed of mul­ti­ple lay­ers. Each layer is sep­a­rated by very small glass spac­ers. These spac­ers and the indi­vid­ual lay­ers are very del­i­cate. Rubbing an LCD panel with a fin­ger or even a cloth can cause the spac­ers to break and cause fur­ther issues beyond the orig­i­nal pixel fault. As such most repair tech­ni­cians with ser­vice cer­ti­fi­ca­tions are trained not to use the rub or tap meth­ods – use them at your own risk.
  • Most LCD man­u­fac­turer war­ranties for LCD dis­plays will cover replace­ment of the panel when the dis­play reaches a cer­tain num­ber of pixel anom­alies. These war­ranties how­ever gen­er­ally will not cover dam­age caused by rub­bing the screen so use extreme cau­tion and con­tact the man­u­fac­turer before pro­ceed­ing to see if you qual­ify for repair or replacement.

Sources and Citations

  • JScreenFix – A web-based Java Applet that ran­domly turns on and off each pixel at up to 60 times a sec­ond to fix stuck pixels.
  • TomsHardware.com – Article on how many dead pix­els a mon­i­tor must have for your spe­cific man­u­fac­turer to replace it.
  • JeffPatch.com blog – Post about the Sony Color Flashing Video which can also fix stuck pixels.
  • DPT 2.20 – A Windows appli­ca­tion to help locate and iden­tify dead/stuck pix­els. Also has a pixel exer­ciser built in to pos­si­bly get lazy pix­els work­ing again.
  • UDPixel 2.1 – A free win­dows appli­ca­tion which help you to locate and fix 1 or more stuck pixels.
  • LCD Scrub – An $18 Mac-only screen­saver that flashes var­i­ous pat­terns on the screen to fix burn-in

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