Dark dot defect A
dark dot defect is usually caused by a
transistor in the transparent
electrode layer that is stuck "on" for
TN panels or "off" for
MVA, PVA, and IPS panels. In that state, the liquid crystal material does not do any rotation so that the light from the backlight does not pass through the
RGB layer of the display.
Bright dot defect A
bright dot defect or
hot pixel is a group of three sub-pixels (one pixel) all of whose transistors are "off" for TN panels or stuck "on" for MVA and PVA panels. This allows all light to pass through to the RGB layer, creating a bright pixel that is always on. Another cause of bright dot may be the presence of impurities in the liquid crystal. On the one hand, impurities will affect the alignment of liquid crystal molecules, and on the other hand, they can reflect light to form bright spots.
Partial sub-pixel defect A
partial sub-pixel defect is a manufacturing defect in which the RGB film layer was not cut properly.
Tape automated bonding fault A
tape automated bonding fault (
TAB fault) is caused by a connection failure from the TAB that connects the transparent electrode layers to the video driver board of an LCD. TAB is one of several methods employed in the LCD-manufacturing process to electrically connect hundreds of signal paths going to the rows and columns of
electrodes in layer 6 (the transparent electrode layer) in the LCD to the video
integrated circuits (ICs) on the driver board that drives these electrodes. If an LCD is subjected to physical shock, this could cause one or more TAB connections to fail inside the display. This failure is often caused by horizontally flexing the chassis (e.g., while wall-mounting or transporting a display face up/down) or simple failure of the adhesive holding the TAB against the glass. TAB faults require the replacement of the LCD module itself. If these connections were to fail, the effect would be that an entire row or column of pixels would fail to activate. This causes a horizontal or vertical black line to appear on the display while the rest of the display would appear normal. The horizontal failure runs from edge to edge; the vertical failure runs from top-to-bottom. Apple claims that TAB faults, as opposed to other physical defects found in an LCD, do not allow for repair.
Stuck sub-pixel A
stuck sub-pixel or
stuck pixel is a pixel that is always "on". This is usually caused by a transistor that is getting power all the time (VA/IPS) or not getting any power (TN) and is therefore continuously allowing light at that point to pass through to the
RGB layer. Any given pixel will stay red, blue, or green and will not change when attempting to display an image. These pixels may only show up using certain applications, or they may be on all the time. ==Manufacturer policy==