V
FUTABA 9Z
THE UNOFFICIAL WORKSHOP MANUAL
WARNING:
THE INFORMATION IN THIS MANUAL IS FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY AND MAY BE INCORRECT, CAUSE DAMAGE
TO YOUR RADIO OR INJURY TO YOURSELF AND OTHERS. IF YOU USE THIS MANUAL YOU DO SO SOLEY AT YOUR OWN RISK.
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Page 35 of 84
3.
Remove the PCB holding the LCD screen and metal shield
4.
Remove the metal shield by carefully bending the retaining lugs (see Figure 29)
5.
Very carefully flip the exposed LCD over to one side so it is off the PCB. It will still
be attached to the PCB by a short ribbon cable at one end, be extremely careful not
to damage this cable (see Figure 29).
6.
Disconnect the short ribbon cable and replace the LCD.
7.
Reassemble the LCD Assembly being careful to ensure a good contact between
LCD and PCB contacts (Lines will appear on your LCD if a bad contact is made)
8.
Reassemble your transmitter enough to test the new LCD. Do not fully reassemble
as it is likely that you may have a bad contact in the LCD (see above).
9.
If everything is working fine, clean the LCD with a soft cloth to remove finger marks
and then fully reassemble the transmitter. Reassembly is a reversal of disassembly.
Figure 29 Complete disassembly of middle PCB and LCD Panel
3.10. Transmitter battery pack
Note: The inclusion of a diode within the pack limits your safe charging rate to 300mA
without a special diode ‘jumper’ and prevents your digital charger from sensing battery
voltage or cycling the pack. It is recommended that you make a simple diode “jumper”
and upgrade your pack using the instructions in Section 4.7.
The 9Z’s transmitter battery pack is somewhat different from the usual transmitter packs
you can buy readily from the internet or your local model shop. It is a cartridge style pack
with an in-built PCB and 0.1” single row receptacle connector (PCB header style) that
connects to the transmitter. This has allowed Futaba to sell replacement packs at a
ridiculously high cost as, in bulk, the unit must cost very little to make. Despite its