Robertwav1 said:
I've worked on LCD's before but not on a car. A lot of the problems that I have found over the past is the connection between the Liquid Crystal and the circuit board. It would be worth taking it apart and cleaning it. Sort of a carbon connection that presses against the copper contacts on the board. If any condensation or dirt gets between that connection area it kills the display. Sometimes you may see only part of the display, several segments missing. You have to take it out anyway. Good Luck!
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check this out....
If you're considering doing this, you have an old Corvette. Potentially 17 years old. Vibrations, current flow and time conspire to cause the solder joints to become "cold" or broken. This manifests itself in the following ways:
a) If you have a cruise control, the cruise control computer is built into the Digital Cluster. In my case, the cruise would never set.
b) The dash lights flicker or go out altogether for extended periods of time. Hitting the dash (not recommended) usually brings the lights back.
c) Dash lights go out and turn indicator lights and high beam indicator light go to full intensity. This happens because the Digital Cluster has lost its factory ground and grounds itself through these lights.
d) One or more LCD segments are continuously on or off. There are small rubber conductive blocks that connect the glass LCD display panels to the bottom circuit board. Sometimes these become dislodged or dirty.
Solution:
The likely culprit of your display troubles are the connectors that connect the two circuit boards. Sometimes the trouble is the connector itself, and can be repaired by cleaning the connector with an electrical contact cleaner. But most often, it's a "cold" broken solder joint between the bottom circuit board and the board connector. To resolder this connector requires complete (not just partial) disassembly of the instrument panel.
Please note:
Please read through these procedures before attempting any repairs. If you don't have the skills to perform these procedures, take the Digital Cluster to your local electronics repair shop along with a copy of these instructions. The bill will still be cheaper than the $350.00 advertised by many corvette parts sellers or GM.