![]() ![]() ![]() Once the control panel is loose, you can just ‘fold it back’ and lay it flat on the keyboard (the next picture shows that I mean by ‘laying it flat’). Starting from the back of the laptop (closest to the screen), carefully pry up the center control panel (imagine the dotted red line is a hinge) while being aware there is a small cable attached to it, so once it’s loose, so don’t go pulling the panel too far away from the laptop! Then, flip it back over and open the screen as far back as it will go. To do this, you can either follow the Dell Service manual of removing the keyboard and then putting the cable where it needs to go, or follow along below:įirst, you’ll need to flip over the laptop, remove the battery, and remove the Center Control Cover by first removing these two screws: What you need to do to fix it is just simply push the cables back into the ‘grooved’ chassis, and that should fix most of your bulging/flexing issues! Just like the M1330, it has to do with the WiFi cable not sitting in it’s ‘designated groove’ in the chassis. Just like the keyboard bulge on the Dell XPS M1330, I recently bought a (refurbished) Dell Studio 15 to find that it suffers from the same bulge/flex issue. ![]()
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