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La version Wi-Fi de l'iPad Air d'Apple, numéro de modèle A1474. Disponible en gris sidéral ou argent, il emploie le processeur A7 personnalisé et est livré dans des configurations 16, 32, 64 et 128 Go.

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black screen and no power after battery and screen replacement

so I replaced the battery on the iPad air with a new one.

I also have a new digitiser installed.

I took apart the iPad including the motherboard to replace the battery, and when connecting it all back together the tiny little port for where the volume buttons ribbon cable should go into broke off the motherboard so vol rocker is not connected.

continued putting everything back together and when I test the screen it remains black. I've done button reset a million times to no avail. I'm not even sure if it's even charging as I've got no way of knowing!

does anyone know if having the volume connector off the motherboard is affecting the circuit perhaps to make the iPad not turn on or respond to anything?

or am I missing something in my connections?

please help! my neck is killing from trying to figure this out

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The connector for the Volume Button flex should have no impact on the device booting or not. The challenge here is that you made multiple changes at the same time and it becomes harder to understand what works and what doesn’t.

Let’s eliminate some variables by disconnecting the LCD and Digitizer. While you’re at it, and depending on the state of disassembly, I would also disconnect the FCAM, RCAM and Headphone Jack flexes from the top part of the logic board. Remember to always isolate the battery first, as shown here. This is a critical step that too many people overlook or think not important.

Essentially, you should have only the battery and the logic board connected (don’t forget to put the screw in place to secure the battery connection once your done). Now connect the iPad to an iTunes enabled computer to see if it is recognized. If it is, then you have a good logic board and you should add one flex/component at a time (remember the battery!) until you figure out what causes the issue.

If it isn’t recognized, then you may have a bad replacement battery. You could try you’re original battery to see if it makes a difference. If you have access to a USB Ammeter, you could use that to determine if the device is really drawing current when it says it's charging. If you don’t you should consider getting one as they are cheap and very useful.

If you have access to a multimeter, measure the battery voltage directly at the battery terminals. If you measure 3.5V or more, the battery can boot the device.

If the battery has proper voltage or appears to charge and the device still doesn’t boot, then you have a logic board issue and it will require some advanced troubleshooting by an experienced micro-solderer.

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hi thanks for that info.

my battery reads 3.60 on my multimeter so that is okay. I've disconnected all the ribbon cables leaving just the motherboard and battery connected and then plugged into itunes. it is still not recognised. are there any other ways I could get it to work or does it sound like a deep motherboard issue?

apart from the volume ribbon cable broken I can't see any reason why this wouldn't work!

......

a thought, I fixed the screen 2 days ago and the iPad was on and working. however when I came to charging it, it wouldn't charge. so I tinkered on it and now I can't even get the LCD to light up never mind charge or connect to iTunes.

can you offer any other options to get this fixed?

many thanks

par

so I tinkered on it...that's not a lot to go on.

Sounds like it needs to go to a micro-solderer, there's not much you can do from a DIY perspective when it's a logic board issue.

par

I think I may have taken out flex cables whilst the battery was still attached. if I did that would it cause a fuse to blow out on the motherboard?

par

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