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G750 DIY keyboard backlight color mod + partial disassembly pics.

villiansv
Level 11
DISCLAIMER: This will void your warranty. Don't attempt unless you know what you're doing. I take no responsibility if you break something.

Hello everyone. I've just modded my keyboard backlight color to purple and decided to share. It looks pretty nice, and takes a couple of hours of your time (if you go slowly and carefully) and a few pounds only (or none).

Be very careful when you take apart the laptop, there are a lot of screws of various sizes. You will NOT remember where they all go, so arrange them in a way that will help you remember how to put the whole thing back together.

Without further ado, let's get to it. As with any electronics, ground yourself in case you're statically charged (touch a metal electrical appliance, like a washing machine). If you have anti-static gloves, great. I personally don't.

Part 1: Prerequisites.

You will need translucent plastic, scissors, translucent scotch tape, screwdrivers (duh). You can use whatever is handy for the plastic, I personally bought a stack of binder dividers from an office supplies store. You can find them anywhere, and they're really cheap. The more colors you can get, the more options you will give yourself. Here's what I got:

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Part 2: Bottom side.


Make sure your backlight is turned on. Shut down, unplug from power, take out battery, remove the bottom panel (1 screw). Take out the rubber plugs and unscrew all the screws under them. They are easy to see, you can't miss them. There are however a few tricky screws you will also need to tackle. Take a look:

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The red ones you just unscrew. The left green one holds the optical drive bay. Unscrew it, then slide the optical drive out. This will reveal 3 screws (also in green, not visible on pic) previously hidden. Remove those. You're now done with the bottom side. If you've been diligent like I suggested, your screws will be arranged like this:

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Part 3: Remove speaker panel (the bit sticking out behind the screen).

Flip the lapto over, so it's facing you as if you're working on it, with screen closed. Grab hold of the panel behind the screen and pull up. It should come off really easy. DO NOT pull all the way, as there are wires connected to it:

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The left jack (red highlight) is what you want to detach - it's the speaker wires. Pull out the jack, here's a nice closeup pic for you:

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Part 4: Remove the keyboard panel.

Look at the following pic:

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The red highlight is where you should remove a screw. There's one more on the other side, take that off too. Now, you can lift the bit that you just unscrewed with your fingers until it pops. I've tried to show this here:

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Note that there's a gap between the chassis and the keyboard panel now. Do the same on the other side. Use your fingernails and slide them along the gap so the plastic clips holding the panel all pop. This will result in a loose keyboard panel (basically the whole top section of the laptop). Lift it very slightly and slide it towards you NO MORE THAN AN INCH (the panel is still connected to the motherboard via ribbon cables, you don't want to break them):

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Once at this stage, lift the screen side up so you can see and reach the 4 ribbon cables. I've tried to take a pic from the side:

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Unplug the two red, then the two green ones (colors are referring to my highlight).

*** IMPORTANT. These are not unplugged via force. The white plastic connectors on the motherboard all have a black latch. You open the latch upwards, then the cable comes out. When you reconnect them back later on, insert the cable and close the latch. ***

Remove the keyboard panel and put it aside.

*** OFFTOPIC - Here is a picture showing you where the WiFi card (red) and the remaining two RAM slots (green) are:

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Part 5: Remove the backlight led layer from the keyboard.


Take the laptop and put it aside, you don't need it for now. Flip the keyboard face down, like this:

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The backlight led layer is taped/glued to the bottom of the keyboard. We need to untape/unglew it. Start by removing the big red rectangle piece (go slowly, no rush), then the small red pieces (easy). The keyboard cable (green) is also taped, untape it (but do NOT pull it out, it's not meant to be pulled out). Put the big square piece aside, sticky side up. You're now at this stage:

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Unstick the long rectangular red piece (go slowly) and the corner red piece (easy). Once you do this, you are ready to start peeling off the backlight layer. Start in one corner, and peel off the short side (screwdriver is in there only to hold it up while I snap the photo):

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Then continue peeling:

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Until finally it comes off:

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Continued in next post.
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25 REPLIES 25

Myk_SilentShado
Level 15
I have no clue what ISO noise is, but damn that looks awesome!! great read 🙂 +1

Myk SilentShadow wrote:
I have no clue what ISO noise is, but damn that looks awesome!! great read 🙂 +1


Thank you. ISO is a measure of sensitivity of the sensor in the digital camera. With film cameras, the film itself was rated at e.g. 100 ISO, 200, 400 etc. A digital camera can change its ISO sensitivity. The higher the number, the more sensitive to light the film/sensor is, and hence captures more light in darker settings (all else being equal). However, this is done at a reduction to quality, and is commonly referred to "noise at high ISO".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_noise#Low_and_high-ISO_noise_examples is a good read, and has examples. For reference, the 5 pictures I took in the end were in a pitch black room, with the only light being the keyboard backlight. I used 6400 ISO, so the resulting image is grainy (also shaky, as I didn't have a tripod handy, and you need long-ish exposures too).

Myk SilentShadow wrote:
I have no clue what ISO noise is, but damn that looks awesome!! great read 🙂 +1


Thank you. ISO is a measure of sensitivity of the sensor in the digital camera. With film cameras, the film itself was rated at e.g. 100 ISO, 200, 400 etc. A digital camera can change its ISO sensitivity. The higher the number, the more sensitive to light the film/sensor is, and hence captures more light in darker settings (all else being equal). However, this is done at a reduction to quality, and is commonly referred to "noise at high ISO".

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_noise#Low_and_high-ISO_noise_examples is a good read, and has examples. For reference, the 5 pictures I took in the end were in a pitch black room, with the only light being the keyboard backlight. I used 6400 ISO, so the resulting image is grainy (also shaky, as I didn't have a tripod handy, and you need long-ish exposures too).

tugrul
Level 7
Greak Work. Not for only keyboard coloring beside i learned how to disamble machine. İ see u spent time to prepearing this. Thanks.
Keep up the work. Better then this work is the only video share which is not much necessery but worth it if.
As u know our machines not user friendly with these disamble. Especially e.g. cleaning fans which is a necessary for a notebook.
Still we have great machines. İ have JH model. Only wifi module i disappoint otherwise all things good placement.

tugrul
Level 7
Greak Work. Not for only keyboard coloring beside i learned how to disamble machine. İ see u spent time to prepearing this. Thanks.
Keep up the work. Better then this work is the only video share which is not much necessery but worth it if.
As u know our machines not user friendly with these disamble. Especially e.g. cleaning fans which is a necessary for a notebook.
Still we have great machines. İ have JH model. Only wifi module i disappoint otherwise all things good placement.

DAMN! such a nice post!

Im gonna do it myself too!!! im only gonna try and use different colors. (F1-F10=blue, No. Keypad=Violet, QWERTY=green and so on)
Would that even look nice?

Is there any realy tricky part that i need to watch about?

Nicely done! Thank you for this!

Thestroj wrote:
DAMN! such a nice post!

Im gonna do it myself too!!! im only gonna try and use different colors. (F1-F10=blue, No. Keypad=Violet, QWERTY=green and so on)
Would that even look nice?

Is there any realy tricky part that i need to watch about?

Nicely done! Thank you for this!


At the end of Part 6 I linked a youtube video which helped me immensely. It's for an older model, but you can use it to see what different colors would look like.

I think I've covered the important bits in the guide, but if I had to stress anything crucial, it's to take care when unplugging the ribbon cables and also when unglueing the sticky pads holding the LED layer. Just go slow and steady, you can't really mess it up then.

domu221
Level 7
y is this not sticky

Darnassus
Status Under Review
Wait, just an off-topic question... where does the air come from into the laptop that is sucked out the back?

Darnassus wrote:
Wait, just an off-topic question... where does the air come from into the laptop that is sucked out the back?


Through the keyboard and/or from under the screen panel (not 100% sure which). It's great because I can use it on non-rigid surfaces like bedsheets without worrying I'm covering the air intake.