Here I’m going to post some laptop screen photos showing bad video output. I’ll explain what was wrong with the screen and how I fixed it. I plan to ad more examples as soon as I get new pictures. If you have your own example (and know how to fix it) please let me know and I’ll post it too.
Here’s some help for finding a correct part for your laptop.
Other post related to troubleshooting laptop video problems:
How to troubleshoot and fix laptop video problems
Taking apart notebook LCD screen
Replacing LCD screen inverter
The newly installed screen is not working
Example 1.
Here’s a picture of Satellite M55 LCD screen I made this morning. I got this video output as soon as I started the laptop. There were a lot of vertical lines, and they were changing color without any pattern. To me it looked like Northern Lights (never seen in real life)
. The external monitor worked fine.

As soon as I applied some tension to the screen it changed the pattern. Some horizontal lines appeared in the middle of the LCD.

Here’s the difference. When I torque the screen, the image appears but it’s distorted with some horizontal lines running across the screen.
Reseating the video cable didn’t make any change and the problem was fixed after I replaced the LCD screen.
Example 2.
I took this picture from Toshiba Satellite M65. I think that this example is very typical. One day you wake up, turn on the laptop and see one or a few hair-like vertical lines in different colors.

When you move the LCD screen some lines might disappear or more lines appear on the screen. A video output on an external screen would be perfect, without any lines. Unfortunately, these lines indicate a screen problem. I’ve never seen this kind of video output caused by a bad video cable or bad FL inverter board. My laptop was fixed after I replaced the LCD screen.
Example 3.
The photo below comes from Toshiba Satellite 5205. The laptop displays identical vertical lines all over the LCD screen as soon as I turn it on. Sometimes these lines are red, sometimes they are blue, sometimes they become wider and change color to white.

The same pattern appears on the external monitor. It displays same vertical lines. When the same video defect appears on both monitors – internal LCD screen and external screen, then most likely it happens because of a bad video card. On some laptops the video card is integrated into the system board, on other models it’s a separate module.

In this example, the vertical lines were caused by a failed video memory on the system board. I’ve tested the video memory with Microscope utility and it failed the test. In Toshiba Satellite 5205 the video memory is integrated into the system board. To fix the problem, I’ll have to replace the board. (We do not have equipment to replace the memory module itself).
Example 4.
Here’s another example of a bad LCD screen. My bad! It wasn’t the LCD screen problem.

As soon as I turned on the laptop, I was getting these reddish marks on the LCD screen but not on the external monitor. Reseating and replacing the video cable didn’t help. The problem disappeared when I installed my test LCD screen. Yes, for some reason I wasn’t able to reproduce the problem on my test LCD screen. But the reddish video appeared again as soon as I replaced the screen. I guess it happened because the system board had some kind of intermittent problem with onboard video or video connector. Long story short, I had to replace the system board and it fixed the problem. Yep, I misdiagnosed this laptop.
Example 5.
Here’s one more example of a faulty LCD screen. The left half of the screen works just fine but the right side is completely white.

Example 6.
Here’s another laptop with a bad LCD screen. This time it’s a tablet PC.

Example 7.
This screen looks like the screen on the example 1. I hooked up an external monitor and the external video works perfectly fine.

Here’s the difference. When I torque the screen, the image appears but it’s distorted with some horizontal lines running across the screen.

After a few seconds the image washes away.

I had to replace the LCD screen.
Example 8.
This laptop displays inverted colors right from the startup. As you see, the Toshiba logo is light green instead of red. The background is light gray instead of black. The Intel logo should be blue on a white background but it is red on a black background.

When your laptop displays inverted colors as on the picture above, this is an indication of a bad screen. You’ll have to replace the screen.
Example 9.
Here are two more screens. In both cases this problem is related to the LCD screen, witch means the screen has to be replaced.
On the image below you see a white band running from the top of the screen to the bottom. This band appears right from the laptop startup and runs through the logo too.

On the following image only the left side of the screen is working properly. This problem is caused by faulty LCD screen.

Are you looking for a new LCD screen for your laptop? Try here.
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October 18th, 2007 at 1:00 pm
Kayla,
If the same defect appears on both screens, most likely you have a problem with the video card. You’ll have to replace the video card. If the video card is integrated into the motherboard as it is on most laptops, you’ll have to replace the motherboard.
I don’t think this is software/driver related issue.
October 17th, 2007 at 10:57 am
The image is exactly the same on an external monitor, it still has the blue grid. How can I fix this?
October 13th, 2007 at 8:23 pm
Kayla,
Test the laptop with an external monitor. Do you see the same dotted grid of blue lines on the external monitor or they appear only on the internal LCD screen? If external video is fine, you might have a problem with the laptop screen.
October 10th, 2007 at 2:47 pm
I have an older model Alienware Area 51m 766 laptop(Conspiracy Blue) that needs repair. Problem is, I bought it off eBay for around $480 because it’s all I could afford for college, so I have no warranty and the Alienware techs won’t help, they just ignore me.
I don’t know the first thing about fixing any type of computer, nor do I have the tools. I was hoping someone here could help me?
The screen displays these dotted grid of blue lines that move around. Sometimes they appear yellow, when I view a web page that has a white background.
picture here: http://i22.tinypic.com/2mi2w5d.jpg
October 5th, 2007 at 10:57 am
Whistle,
Then this problem is not software related.
Sounds like a problem with the screen.
Do not repair it yourself, you will lose the warranty. I would recommend sending it back to Dell for repair.
October 3rd, 2007 at 8:00 pm
… .and the laptop is an E1505 with the SXGA+ screen, if that matters.
October 3rd, 2007 at 7:59 pm
Hi, I think I’ve got a screen that’s an example one but I’m not sure.
I just got the computer a few months ago and it’s under Dell’s regular 1 year limited warranty.
I’ve made a thread about it at http://forum.notebookreview.co.....p?t=175636; the following is copy pasted from there.
“I pretty much have no idea what’s going on with my computer so I’ll just describe everything.
Yesterday everything was working fine. Today I turn it on and the screen starts to show flickering gray lines and/or my login screen compressed into 20 pixels high and/or various rainbow colors with my desktop (I think it inverses the colors). But if I keep it on for a while, it all goes back to just a plain gray screen, sometimes with a few random straight lines across at points. It’s kind of like an old CRT TV with a magnet nearby and on a channel it can’t get a signal on.
This happens right when I turn the computer on; no software’s even had the time to load (even BIOS).
When I smack it sometimes it goes back to normal, but quickly rainbow-inverses itself and eventually goes back to the gray screen (as always).
The analog video-out (the blue type, you know?) works and I’m using that with my external monitor now, so it’s not a problem with the video card or some other part of the computer.”
Thanks!
September 30th, 2007 at 8:43 pm
John Jackson,
Test the laptop with an external screen. Do the same triple images appear on the external screen?
Can you see these triple images only in Windows or the same defect appears from the startup and HP logo is not displayed properly?
September 30th, 2007 at 4:58 am
My HP Compaq NX9600 Notebook Series Laptop screen suddenly developed triple images and will only boot up in SAFE mode. I’ve reloaded drivers. Any ideas about a fix?
September 27th, 2007 at 6:10 pm
yeah it was purchased in the USA on 9/8/2004
i purchased the 3 year extended warranty directly from toshiba. so the warranty expired 9/8/2007. I called up tech support seeing what they would do low and behold they said it was good until november 7 of this year. They didnt say why nor did i ask. Now i know why. THanks