assuming they share common ground, and that goes back to a pin somewhere and the ground plain is cracked, which is itself a big trace, then it could cause this.i did not think it would be per key lighting, if it is then it most likely is ground yeah, since when does TP knows about keyboard and electronics? :) thanks for pointing that out
a cracked solder join on a resistor or LED make little sense to me, only one would be off as they should be in parallel, so yeah maybe the flex broke a trace now you will need to put a wire from the + of a LED that is working to one that is not, and if it comes back to life then solder that wire, else try the negative, or else it would be to me that every single one has a defect...
if the wire trick works and you want to do better you should check if the resistor is on the positive or negative side, and do not solder between the LED and resistor, it would lead to uneven lighting.
So i tried the wire trick. and that sort of half worked. I can get all the leds to turn on except for the top two by the usb-c port. im not really sure why this is. any ideas? would this be caused by a resister not working? if so then how do i know what resistor it is. i thought i tested all of the resistors already and they all worked but maybe i missed one.
if the trace broke in one place nothing prevents it from breaking somewhere else, it may have broken in 2 points, and for the resistor the most likely outcome would be a cracked solder join, almost invisible and if you measure the resistor from its contact it will measure fine, just it does not make contact with the pcb on one side, or maybe the broken trace is on the other side of the diode for them as well, so when you fixed the common for all the others those got their common back but the the other side is still disconnected.a cracked solder join on a resistor or LED make little sense to me, only one would be off as they should be in parallel, so yeah maybe the flex broke a trace now you will need to put a wire from the + of a LED that is working to one that is not, and if it comes back to life then solder that wire, else try the negative, or else it would be to me that every single one has a defect...
if the wire trick works and you want to do better you should check if the resistor is on the positive or negative side, and do not solder between the LED and resistor, it would lead to uneven lighting.
So i tried the wire trick. and that sort of half worked. I can get all the leds to turn on except for the top two by the usb-c port. im not really sure why this is. any ideas? would this be caused by a resister not working? if so then how do i know what resistor it is. i thought i tested all of the resistors already and they all worked but maybe i missed one.