简介
This guide outlines how to replace a keyboard on a 2nd generation Lenovo X1 Carbon laptop. These laptops are quite compact, which results in a keyboard replacement being a very involved process. This process includes removing almost every other part of the laptop first.
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Unplug the bundled cable connector attached to the battery by pulling evenly from each side of the plug.
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Remove the four 4mm screws from the corners of the battery.
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Remove the 2.5mm screw from the center of the battery.
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Remove the battery by lifting from the bottom edge and pulling towards the front edge.
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Remove the 3mm screw from the solid state drive.
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Pull the solid state drive straight out from its connector to remove it.
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Lift the ribbon cable locking mechanism.
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Disconnect the ribbon cables by pulling straight out from the socket.
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Disconnect the ribbon cables by pulling straight up.
more a question than comment… mine doesn’t have j2 cable… is that for the touch screen digitizer? if it is does anyone know where to get it?
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Lift the laptop and open the screen 90 degrees.
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Lift the LCD unit straight up to remove it.
if you get just the keyboard replacement you don’t have to remove the screen and speakers… you can just remove the 45 screws of the keyboard
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Remove the 45 Xmm screws from the back of the keyboard that are visible.
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Remove the tape covering one of the Xmm screws and remove that screw.
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Peel back the large ribbon cable and remove the four Xmm screws underneath it.
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Lift the keyboard straight up to remove it.
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To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
To reassemble your device, follow these instructions in reverse order.
16等其他人完成本指南。
8条评论
This was one heck of a difficult feat, thank you for documenting the process. It took me about one hour to disassemble and two hours to re-assemble.
Excellent guide - many thanks for writing this. It took me about 3 hours in total as well but it’s all done now. Worst part was the 50 tiny screws holding the keyboard in place!
Hey, I did this and have some serious Wi-Fi connection issues now…Ethernet and Wi-Fi are both listed as non-operational although sometimes a network will appear in my available networks to connect to. Any idea what might have gone wrong? I took out the LAN card and reinserted it, no dice.
You got the cables connected to the wrong little circle post on the wifi card. Swap them and it should work! happened to me drove me mad until I tried it.
I do have issues that seem to be the CMOS Battery.
I couldn't see that in your disassembly instructions.
I am looking everywhere for this little issue and I can not find instructions for the CMOS replacement.
Could you enlight a little where to get this information?
My laptop got rained on. After initially drying it out, the laptop wasn't turning on. Then it would turn on but was shutting down very rapidly. I followed this guide as far as the keyboard and adaptive LCD display removal. After disassembling and cleaning with isopropyl alcohol and compressed air (including some bluish deposits on ribbon cable connectors) the laptop now powers on without the battery and also with the battery installed. I also reapplied the thermal paste to the fan as advised.
The only thing not working is the LCD adaptive keys display, which I understand is universally hated, but nevertheless somewhat important.
Will try and go the whole way through the disassembly to see if I can get that going again. But for now very grateful for this guide.
I would strongly recommend using a tight fiited pair of disposable vinyl gloves both for grip and avoiding unwanted microsubstances getting on the microchips when doing this :)
My experience: not every step is necessary. I replaced the keyboard (X1 Carbon 3rd gen) and what you have to do is to work the keyboard free so you can remove it. I do not see, for example, any reason why you have to remove the speakers and the screen.
I’ve had a Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon laptop since January 2020. I have one troublesome occassionally-crooked keyboard key, that always returns to the correct position, and that is not entirely broken. I requested Lenovo to replace the entire keyboard because it is under warranty. The Lenovo technician told me that the entire laptop would have to be disassembled to replace the keyboard. I did not allow the Lenovo technician to replace the entire keyboard just to replace one troublesome key because I didn’t want to risk damaging the laptop and creating more significant operating problems. I can buy parts to fix the key if it breaks comepletely. Or I can replace the entire keyboard later before the 3-year warranty runs out. This leads to my questions — Did I make the right decision? What is the risk that the very difficult keyboard replacement will cause other damage and laptop operating problems? Should I replace the entire keyboard to repair the troublesome key before the 3-year warranty runs out?