Which replacement screen/digitizer/housing?? - Galaxy Note 3 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

So last week, I accidentally dropped my naked note 3 about 1.5 feet to a concrete sidewalk. Very little visible damage on the outside, but sadly, over the span of about 24hrs, the screen slowly faded to black (starting from the bottom left, where the most ammount of damage is visible, across the screen in a circular pattern), and now the screen appears to be completely dead. During the time in which the screen went black, the digitizer still worked, as I could still get the phone to register spen clicks on even the black areas of the screen (i.e. i could still get air command to pop up). There is also zero damage to the glass itself. No scratches, skuffs, or marks of any type. Looks brand new.
So I'm currently in the market for a replacement screen/digitizer/housing assembly, should the repair centre quote me more than $275 + taxes to fix.
I'm going with a complete housing, because while I'm sure its simply the LCD screen portion that's no longer working, those in themselves cost upwards of $250. And it would require me to seperate the glass from the housing/digitizer, and then reseal them with the new one. I figured it would be much more cost effective to simply buy the whole package pre-assembled for $25 more.
Problem is, you can get different housing part numbers depending on which version of the phone you have (verizon, at&t). So my question is this:
Will it matter if I purchase the cheapest version? As an example, the AT&T black housing is 275, but the Verizon Black housing is 289. The last thing i want to do is fork over the money and find I ordered the wrong part.
I'm from Canada, and sadly our carriers are never recognized in these bloody situations. I'm with Bell, and I'm 'fairly' certain its identical to AT&T, but I wanted peoples opinions from here, as you are by far the most knowledgable about parts/hardware etc.
I'm SO choked at myself for being careless. My phone seemed to be flawless, and didn't exhibit any of the faults other people complained about (screen discoloration, all the functions like multi-window, one-handed operation, etc. not working). And now I've gone and forced open heart surgery on the thing.
I was looking here for the part:
http://www.etradesupply.com/samsung.html
As you can see, they have multiple models listed, and I just need to know if I'm selecting the right one.
(I also think that AT&T is my best choice, because after opening up the phone down to the motherboard and other parts, AT&T is printed all over the place. But I could be reading more into that than I should).

Just get a free replacement with your warranty...

Payette1996 said:
Just get a free replacement with your warranty...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because there is physical damage to the device? This voids most types of warranties, outside of some carrier warranties (it would actually void bell's, after reading over the fine print).
I basically have to fund the repairs myself, unless I sent it to the repair center, and they miraculously came back saying the damage didn't cause the problem, and it was just a defective screen. But the chance of THAT happening are pretty much nil.

Related

vogue housing dilemma

hello guys,
i've decided that my bell vogue most likely needs to be warrantied (it expires in october), as the front faceplate (top part) of my htc touch came loose. as a result, the power button doesn't always work unless i press in and hold the top part of the faceplate then press the power button as there's pressure. i believe the power button spring functions at 100% when it's secured by the front and rear faceplate pressing inwards?! i'm not too sure why it came loose or what happened, some people have pm'd me saying possibly from constantly always having it on vibration?! the phone's always been in an monaco metal case and hasn't been dropped as i'm meticulous. now in order to tighten the frontal housing, the top 2 screws need to be tightened. 1 screw is easily accessible however, the other is covered with a void sticker as i'm told to prevent people from tampering with the phone. so i guess the only option is to warranty it as any attempts on my own will ruin the sticker. everything works 110% on the phone, no cracks on lcd, black lines, ink etc etc. just that the top Left corner of the front faceplate is protruding out
my concern is that i've read some mixed horror stories of how when phones get sent in to be warrantied, the owner ends up with a $200 bill (bell charges this for the htc touch refurbished replacement that they send you). course, it's possible that these people had water damage/crack screens from drops and tried to claim manufacturer defect. i dunno
just wondering if anyone experienced any similar situations and would like to share. debating whether it's worth it or not cause if i'm outta my beloved smartphone for 3-4 weeks and end up tabulating a significant bill cause they say it's 'my fault' in the end, it's gonna stink. my other course of option is to simply take off void sticker and work my t5 screw driver and see what's up and if something broke, order a $40-50 replacement housing on ebay.
thanks in advanced!
My glossy-white Verizon vogue developed a crack in the casing a few months in, so I replaced it with a matte-finish (Sprint-style) black housing that I ordered brand-new from Hong Kong. I voided the warranty in switching the housing, but it was reasonably easy, completed in one afternoon, and I never developed another problem I couldn't fix myself. So, my 2 cents - make your phone your own, and take a peek inside, warranty be damned.
I agree with brsev! Just make sure you buy a housing for a P3050 not a P3450 like I did.

[Q] Which replacement screen/digitizer/housing??

I'm reposting this as a question, so that it gets bumped back to the front page (was sitting on page 6 after just over 1 complete day), and to hopefully get more views and some help. Thanks.
*************
So last week, I accidentally dropped my naked note 3 about 1.5 feet to a concrete sidewalk. Very little visible damage on the outside, but sadly, over the span of about 24hrs, the screen slowly faded to black (starting from the bottom left, where the most ammount of damage is visible, across the screen in a circular pattern), and now the screen appears to be completely dead. During the time in which the screen went black, the digitizer still worked, as I could still get the phone to register spen clicks on even the black areas of the screen (i.e. i could still get air command to pop up). There is also zero damage to the glass itself. No scratches, skuffs, or marks of any type. Looks brand new. And I've already tried getting the warranty to cover this. Its not.
So I'm currently in the market for a replacement screen/digitizer/housing assembly, should the repair centre quote me more than $275 + taxes to fix.
I'm going with a complete housing, because while I'm sure its simply the LCD screen portion that's no longer working, those in themselves cost upwards of $250. And it would require me to seperate the glass from the housing/digitizer, and then reseal them with the new one. I figured it would be much more cost effective to simply buy the whole package pre-assembled for $25 more.
Problem is, you can get different housing part numbers depending on which version of the phone you have (verizon, at&t). So my question is this:
Will it matter if I purchase the cheapest version? As an example, the AT&T black housing is 275, but the Verizon Black housing is 289. The last thing i want to do is fork over the money and find I ordered the wrong part.
I'm from Canada, and sadly our carriers are never recognized in these bloody situations. I'm with Bell, and I'm 'fairly' certain its identical to AT&T, but I wanted peoples opinions from here, as you are by far the most knowledgable about parts/hardware etc.
I'm SO choked at myself for being careless. My phone seemed to be flawless, and didn't exhibit any of the faults other people complained about (screen discoloration, all the functions like multi-window, one-handed operation, etc. not working). And now I've gone and forced open heart surgery on the thing.
I was looking here for the part:
http://www.etradesupply.com/samsung.html
As you can see, they have multiple models listed, and I just need to know if I'm selecting the right one.
(I also think that AT&T is my best choice, because after opening up the phone down to the motherboard and other parts, AT&T is printed all over the place. But I could be reading more into that than I should).

My experience with G3 screen repair

If you've broken the screen on your week-old G3 (new rescue pup thought my TPU-covered G3 was a chew toy) and wondered whether to (a) try to fix it yourself with parts off the Internet, (b) take it to a local shop, or (c) ship it to LG for a "warranty" repair, here's my experience with the process.
There's nothing out there showing how to fix the G3 screen other than one shop's teardown that claims it's easy to fix G3 hardware issues (nothing about the screen though). Parts are posted all over the Internet and eBay, but they're all generic-looking stuff and who knows if the digitizer glass is really GG3. Prices of parts ranging $140 to $200, and I need both the digitizer glass and the LCD, maybe a front frame because it has a couple of small dings from the dog's teeth. Already dreading the price quotes from shops, since the QHD LCD must be more expensive than anything out there, and it's fairly new. Figuring that it will cost hundreds of dollars no matter who I have repair it, since that's what some shops quote for newer smartphones and tablets like the Galaxy S5 and Note 3, I decided to ship my G3 to LG so I wouldn't void what warranty I had left.
LG received the phone 7/28/14. The next day, they email me a diagnosis and repair quote since it's not covered by warranty (duh!).
It will cost $146 to repair, $153 to fully refurbish. Pretty much justifies not getting the insurance policy. YMMV, from what I read in the G2 forum about LG factory service (the parts/repair prices may vary depending on availability and demand).
So if you drop and break the screen of your precious new G3, then don't worry about how much it will cost to repair this relatively new device, if you are not too concerned about turnaround time.
jklew said:
If you've broken the screen on your week-old G3 (new rescue pup thought my TPU-covered G3 was a chew toy) and wondered whether to (a) try to fix it yourself with parts off the Internet, (b) take it to a local shop, or (c) ship it to LG for a "warranty" repair, here's my experience with the process.
There's nothing out there showing how to fix the G3 screen other than one shop's teardown that claims it's easy to fix G3 hardware issues (nothing about the screen though). Parts are posted all over the Internet and eBay, but they're all generic-looking stuff and who knows if the digitizer glass is really GG3. Prices of parts ranging $140 to $200, and I need both the digitizer glass and the LCD, maybe a front frame because it has a couple of small dings from the dog's teeth. Already dreading the price quotes from shops, since the QHD LCD must be more expensive than anything out there, and it's fairly new. Figuring that it will cost hundreds of dollars no matter who I have repair it, since that's what some shops quote for newer smartphones and tablets like the Galaxy S5 and Note 3, I decided to ship my G3 to LG so I wouldn't void what warranty I had left.
LG received the phone 7/28/14. The next day, they email me a diagnosis and repair quote since it's not covered by warranty (duh!).
It will cost $146 to repair, $153 to fully refurbish. Pretty much justifies not getting the insurance policy. YMMV, from what I read in the G2 forum about LG factory service (the parts/repair prices may vary depending on availability and demand).
So if you drop and break the screen of your precious new G3, then don't worry about how much it will cost to repair this relatively new device, if you are not too concerned about turnaround time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The issue is that your phone loses approximately $5/day in value everyday. So even bigger loss each day its out of your hands ... So insurance isn't that bad! I really think with the life cycles of cell phones the G3 will be on craigslist for $250 in a few months !
Hey All,
My two bits...I dropped my G3 4 days in and destroyed the screen. As you can imagine I was pretty upset and concerned that I had just wasted $800 and had no clue what to do. I ended up finding a retailer online that sold the Oem screen, digitizer and casing for what ended up to be just over $200. With a little help from the disassembly video I tried to do myself. I am happy to report that it was unbelievably easy to complete the repair and I have a 100% working phone again. As the video shows you remove 13 screws, remove the two pieces of the backing and pull out the mother board. The only thing you need to do then it gently remove the vibrator, camera..front and rear, speaker, head phone jack and little daughter board. These are all stuck with two sided tape and just require a little light prying to remove. The replacement unit even had the two sided tape pre installed and you only had to remove the little plastic tabs that covered the sticky tape and then place each part in its corresponding place. I reassembled the phone and voila...a brand new working G3. The nice thing is the replacement was the case as well so the dings and dents from the drop on the case were all gone as well. So if you do the same don't be afraid to save the labour and do it yourself
imapfsr said:
Hey All,
My two bits...I dropped my G3 4 days in and destroyed the screen. As you can imagine I was pretty upset and concerned that I had just wasted $800 and had no clue what to do. I ended up finding a retailer online that sold the Oem screen, digitizer and casing for what ended up to be just over $200. With a little help from the disassembly video I tried to do myself. I am happy to report that it was unbelievably easy to complete the repair and I have a 100% working phone again. As the video shows you remove 13 screws, remove the two pieces of the backing and pull out the mother board. The only thing you need to do then it gently remove the vibrator, camera..front and rear, speaker, head phone jack and little daughter board. These are all stuck with two sided tape and just require a little light prying to remove. The replacement unit even had the two sided tape pre installed and you only had to remove the little plastic tabs that covered the sticky tape and then place each part in its corresponding place. I reassembled the phone and voila...a brand new working G3. The nice thing is the replacement was the case as well so the dings and dents from the drop on the case were all gone as well. So if you do the same don't be afraid to save the labour and do it yourself
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why on earth did you pay 800 for the g3 when they were only 599 on release day?
thegrants82 said:
Why on earth did you pay 800 for the g3 when they were only 599 on release day?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I purchased it from a reseller before it was released here and I also live in Canada where everything just costs a little more ?
thegrants82 said:
Why on earth did you pay 800 for the g3 when they were only 599 on release day?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Some things cost more in other countrys. And I also wanted a really good reseller in case anything happens. With quick and good support. without need to send it, wait two weeks etcetc.
And ye. Payed 800$ here in Sweden.
GG3
Reading this made me look up just what's so great about Corning's various hardened glass, and I've realised it's much more to do with being scratch-resistant than actually shatter proof. Funny how easily marketing will leave you stuck with the wrong (inflated) idea ... and, sure, scratch resistance is nice, but then that's why you buy a nice cheap case for your phone rather than put it in your pocket together with your keys.
armadafan271 said:
The issue is that your phone loses approximately $5/day in value everyday. So even bigger loss each day its out of your hands ... So insurance isn't that bad! I really think with the life cycles of cell phones the G3 will be on craigslist for $250 in a few months !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It won't be THAT cheap for a while. G2's were still going for like $400 up until the g3 launched.
jklew said:
If you've broken the screen on your week-old G3 (new rescue pup thought my TPU-covered G3 was a chew toy) and wondered whether to (a) try to fix it yourself with parts off the Internet, (b) take it to a local shop, or (c) ship it to LG for a "warranty" repair, here's my experience with the process.
There's nothing out there showing how to fix the G3 screen other than one shop's teardown that claims it's easy to fix G3 hardware issues (nothing about the screen though). Parts are posted all over the Internet and eBay, but they're all generic-looking stuff and who knows if the digitizer glass is really GG3. Prices of parts ranging $140 to $200, and I need both the digitizer glass and the LCD, maybe a front frame because it has a couple of small dings from the dog's teeth. Already dreading the price quotes from shops, since the QHD LCD must be more expensive than anything out there, and it's fairly new. Figuring that it will cost hundreds of dollars no matter who I have repair it, since that's what some shops quote for newer smartphones and tablets like the Galaxy S5 and Note 3, I decided to ship my G3 to LG so I wouldn't void what warranty I had left.
LG received the phone 7/28/14. The next day, they email me a diagnosis and repair quote since it's not covered by warranty (duh!).
It will cost $146 to repair, $153 to fully refurbish. Pretty much justifies not getting the insurance policy. YMMV, from what I read in the G2 forum about LG factory service (the parts/repair prices may vary depending on availability and demand).
So if you drop and break the screen of your precious new G3, then don't worry about how much it will cost to repair this relatively new device, if you are not too concerned about turnaround time.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How long did it take lg to send it back to you?
armadafan271 said:
The issue is that your phone loses approximately $5/day in value everyday. So even bigger loss each day its out of your hands ... So insurance isn't that bad! I really think with the life cycles of cell phones the G3 will be on craigslist for $250 in a few months !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Loses $5 a day in value a day lol??
That would mean my phone would be worth $0 in a month from now...
The value goes down more like .50 cents a day at most...
Amb669 said:
Loses $5 a day in value a day lol??
That would mean my phone would be worth $0 in a month from now...
The value goes down more like .50 cents a day at most...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In a couple months you will have to pay someone to take it from you.
Sent from my LG-D851 using XDA Free mobile app
LG G3 repair
The G3 is ten times easier to repair than the G2. The back comes right off like any other normal android phone. Remove the screws that you see holding the back on the midframe/bezel. remove the top half using a safety pry tool and do the same with the bottom half. Disconnect the two ribbon connections at bottom near charging port. Take out battery if you haven't already. Heat the back using heat gun or hairdryer. Heat front of assembly using the same heat gun or hairdryer. There are no other ribbons or connections to worry about at this point. Using iSesamo bar or other prying tool remove the broken assembly. (Note: There is no adhesive holding the LCD to the midframe so the removal is very easy.) Just pry around the top and sides of the phone and pull up at top then slide old LCD assembly out. Be sure to use a good 3M adeesive when putting in the new assembly. Connect the ribbons back to the board, close phone, power the phone on and enjoy. The whole process should take no more than half an hour if you ever done any previous repairs to another phone. Hit thanks if this helps
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-LUBTADX2U
Thanks a ton for this thread. I may be able to repair my G3 now. It has been unusable for 3 months now cause I could not find anyone that would repair it.
I need to replace display with bazel
imapfsr said:
Hey All,
My two bits...I dropped my G3 4 days in and destroyed the screen. As you can imagine I was pretty upset and concerned that I had just wasted $800 and had no clue what to do. I ended up finding a retailer online that sold the Oem screen, digitizer and casing for what ended up to be just over $200. With a little help from the disassembly video I tried to do myself. I am happy to report that it was unbelievably easy to complete the repair and I have a 100% working phone again. As the video shows you remove 13 screws, remove the two pieces of the backing and pull out the mother board. The only thing you need to do then it gently remove the vibrator, camera..front and rear, speaker, head phone jack and little daughter board. These are all stuck with two sided tape and just require a little light prying to remove. The replacement unit even had the two sided tape pre installed and you only had to remove the little plastic tabs that covered the sticky tape and then place each part in its corresponding place. I reassembled the phone and voila...a brand new working G3. The nice thing is the replacement was the case as well so the dings and dents from the drop on the case were all gone as well. So if you do the same don't be afraid to save the labour and do it yourself
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey I am trying to do the same thing you did.
My question is how hard was removing the daughter board? What tool and technique you used?
I can't find a video or tutorial where they remove the little daughter board and wanted to know how hard it is to remove before ordering parts.
It really was very easy, much easier than I expected. The daughter board was also pretty easy and I think I ended up using my finger and a guitar pick but anything small will suffice. The two sides sticky is really not that strong so just have patience when pulling those pieces out as they do come off pretty easy, Just use caution, you will be fine.
I need help to apply my pre-cut adhesive to my LG G3 D850
I bought an lg g3 d850 digitizer+lcd combo and a precut adhesive sticker for the model. Howwever, I am not sure how to apply the adhesive because there is less than 1 mm of room on the sides. What is the best approach for me to apply the pre -cut adhesive. Here is the link to the adhesive that I am talking about.
Will LG still repair your LG G3 even if you tried repairing it yourself? I tried ordering a new screen and putting it in myself but that didn't work so the lg g3 has been opened which voids warranty.
My wife's G3 developed this weird mark on the screen (always visible when the screen is on), and she claims to have never done anything like drop it in the tub or toilet... but it appears to be water damage to me. (See pic attached)
I put it in rice for a few weeks, and it's not going away... so I'm ready to try to fix it. Has anyone seen anything like this? Since the glass is still in good shape (it wasn't dropped or cracked)... what do I need to order to fix it?
I had the same concerns as the OP... buying a replacement LCD panel from Amazon or eBay, I wasn't sure if I'd get a full-res OEM replacement or a cheap knock-off. Can anyone point me to a reliable reseller (preferably on Amazon for several reasons) that would have the right parts to fix her phone up?
Thanks
The crack you see is in a tempered glass screen protector... not the screen itself.
Hai guys,
I have broken my glass on g3, display works fine but shuttered portion of screen is not fully functional, please can someone point me to reliable reseller, preferable on eBay, cos don't want to trash my money on knock-offs, I wanna real deal 100% OEM original display. So I need you guys from personal experience to point me in the right direction. Thx in advance!

[Q] Screen 'leaking' internally. Crack is branching and growing everyday. Help Needed

An internal 'crack' seems to have appeared on my device. Since the last two days it has grown and is now more than half the length of the device. Device is still under warranty so will take it to the service center over the weekend. Anybody seen anything similar?
http://i.imgur.com/13LG6lS.jpg
aceutosh said:
An internal 'crack' seems to have appeared on my device. Since the last two days it has grown and is now more than half the length of the device. Device is still under warranty so will take it to the service center over the weekend. Anybody seen anything similar?
http://i.imgur.com/13LG6lS.jpg
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are facing this from the first day of buying there's a probability that you got a defected piece.
According to me hardware doesn't come under warranty. You need to buy another display for your phone.
aceutosh said:
An internal 'crack' seems to have appeared on my device. Since the last two days it has grown and is now more than half the length of the device. Device is still under warranty so will take it to the service center over the weekend. Anybody seen anything similar?
http://i.imgur.com/13LG6lS.jpg
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Looks like a screen lifting. As i see it the glue in-between the glass layer is not holding up. I have a similar case but i did not posed a picture here in Xda. It happened on my device last year (Note 8.0) at the bottom screen near the home button, though i have no proof to show mine because the day it happened i immediately took it to the shop where i bought my unit and they fixed the screen after 3 weeks wait. I got a note from the tech explaining that the glue in-between the lcd etc.. was not holding up, hence the lifting occurred. Hopefully the service center will fix it for you or rather replace the screen.
I concur with the above. It looks more like an adhesive failure vs. a glass failure.
I've repaired a number of older generation devices - namely iPhone 4s, SGS3s, and SGS4s. The latter two are expensive LCD/Glass replacements, as such I did the ole heat and separate to replace busted glass trick. I was able to do so w/o destroying the digitizer/lcd. The first one I was scared $#|tl3ss and took my time, which paved the way for being comfortable doing the others I did...
If I was personally faced with your situation, and having the experience I do, if the device is under warranty with the source, I'd go that route. If it isn't under some sort of warranty, I'd try to heat things up with a heat gun (to ~60-65 degrees centigrade - assuring that I didn't get things too hot by using a handheld contact-less thermometer) and while it cools, push down on the glass (not crushing the device like a neanderthal... ) to see if I could reactivate the adhesive and get the lcd/digitizer to stick to the back of the glass. Absent success with those two options, the last three options you may have, as I see it, are:
Service Center Repair - likely expensive and slow...
DIY - Glass/LCD/Digitizer/Subframe replacement as a single unit - likely just a bit lesser expensive, but much quicker as one wouldn't be w/o the device.
Getting one's hands dirty with a home-brew repair (many videos on youtube) where you remove the glass from a functional LCD/Digitizer and replace the OCA (Optically Clear Adhesive) and reassemble the unit.
This is likely the most cost effective but also the riskiest as one could damage things beyond repair, if one is not mechanically skilled, properly equipped, invests the time to learn, and is patient.
EDIT: It is also prudent to note that going this route requires a very finite attention to detail and proper application of processes, if one doesn't want to end up with a device that has a bunch of air bubbles between the glass, adhesive, and digitizer/LCD - been dhere, duhn dhat...
EDIT 2: Beware that there are a S#|t tonne of parts out there that won't work but look like they will. One needs to do their home-work and verify that one can return whatever units were ordered from a given retailer.​
Hope this helps. Good luck.
-t

[TMO] No Insurance & Cracked Screen -- Options?

Hello everyone!
Like the title reads, I dropped my phone facing the screen and landed on a rock!
To make matters worse, I just learned that when switching from the N4 to the LG V20, my insurance protection was taken away from my account.. I'm livid because I only used my insurance twice in 6 years!
Before calling in and giving the poor rep a piece of my mind, I would like to ask here what have anyone done in a similar scenario and how would you go about fixing the phone without insurance, in case I can't get TMO to reinstate it.
The worse part of all of this is that I can't just call and say "my screen is broken" and use the insurance thru TMO.. Yikes!
I did not have (still don't have) a screen protector but want to fix the screen while I wait for an actual protector.
Pretty much, what options exist for my particular case?
Thanks everyone in advance!
s0
Just get a few quotes from repair stores
If it's just a broken outer glass with the lcd functioning properly it should be quite an inexpensive fix ($7 USD + labour)
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Replace-front-New-Touch-screen-outer-glass-Lens-For-LG-V20-H990-/322358040572?hash=item4b0e0957fc:g:iioAAOSw5cNYOpqk
if the whole screen needs replacing it would be a bit more expensive ($100 USD + labour):
http://www.ebay.com/itm/LG-V20-H910-H915-H918-H990-VS995-LCD-Display-Touch-Digitizer-Assembly-Frame-/272424557440?hash=item3f6dc4db80:g:dw8AAOSwB09YPpXM
The thing I've discovered from the past phones that I've repaired is that the digitizer is adhered to the lcd screen and is difficult if not nearly impossible to separate from each other.
The lg V20 is one of the easiest phones to repair. Replacing the entire screen looks to be a simple task.
Nevermind, I looked at the replacement screen and it seems that the front glass is just that and only adhered by the top and bottom. If that is the case then the $7 option is quite possible. I've replaced a similar glass before and it was only slightly difficult cleaning the broken glass off.
You can find out which option is needed with two simple questions.
1) Is your LCD cracked? Just turn it on and you can see if there is any color bleeding.
2) Does your touch screen still work 100%? Click around to find out.
If your in great standing with T-Mobile and relatively polite they may reinstate the insurance for you to use if it wasn't that long ago.
Thankfully in India we have a 6 month one time screen replacement offer by LG which I plan to use this Saturday as from nowhere I see a deep scratch on my front glass however the screen functions fine.
Sent from my LG-H990 using Tapatalk

Categories

Resources