PCB Help Needed! LED Board Not Working, Seeking Expert Advice

Dianaya

Feb 25, 2026
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Feb 25, 2026
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Hello everyone, I'm a PCB beginner and recently encountered a problem I'd like to ask you all:

I have an LED board, and one of the LEDs is visibly burnt out, causing the entire board to stop working. The power supply seems normal, and the wiring doesn't appear to have any obvious breaks. What could be causing this?

I'd like to repair it myself, and I have a few questions:

Will simply replacing the burnt-out LED restore the board to normal?

What parameters and specifications are needed for the replacement LED?

Besides the LED, could the problem be with the driver, the wiring, or other components?

What precautions should I take when soldering to avoid burning it out again?

I'm new to PCB design and my basic knowledge is weak, so I would greatly appreciate any guidance from experienced PCB developers. Thank you very much!
 

Harald Kapp

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one of the LEDs is visibly burnt out, causing the entire board to stop working.
I doubt the burnt LED is the cause for the failure of the board. A typical failure mode an LED no longer working is an open circuit. Depending on how the LED is being used this means the rest of the circuit is in many cases able to work without the LED. Probably the root cause that led to the burn out of the LED destroyed other components, too.
Impossible to say more without at least a schematic of the circuit.

Not so easy to answer:
Will simply replacing the burnt-out LED restore the board to normal?
Maybe. It depends which other components are possibly affected. Usually an LED doesn't burn out by itself. This mode of failure means that way to high a curent was present. Which should not be the case if all other components are o.k.. So there's very likely at least one if not more other defective components.
What parameters and specifications are needed for the replacement LED?
Ideally the same as for the old LED. Not knowing which type the old LED was and how it was operated, we have no clue as to a replacement. Possibly any LED of the same color may work, but there's no guarantee.
Besides the LED, could the problem be with the driver, the wiring, or other components?
Definitely YES, see above.
What precautions should I take when soldering to avoid burning it out again?
Use correct ESD protection, don't overheat the LED while soldering.
 

Dianaya

Feb 25, 2026
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Feb 25, 2026
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I doubt the burnt LED is the cause for the failure of the board. A typical failure mode an LED no longer working is an open circuit. Depending on how the LED is being used this means the rest of the circuit is in many cases able to work without the LED. Probably the root cause that led to the burn out of the LED destroyed other components, too.
Impossible to say more without at least a schematic of the circuit.

Not so easy to answer:

Maybe. It depends which other components are possibly affected. Usually an LED doesn't burn out by itself. This mode of failure means that way to high a curent was present. Which should not be the case if all other components are o.k.. So there's very likely at least one if not more other defective components.

Ideally the same as for the old LED. Not knowing which type the old LED was and how it was operated, we have no clue as to a replacement. Possibly any LED of the same color may work, but there's no guarantee.

Definitely YES, see above.

Use correct ESD protection, don't overheat the LED while soldering.
Thank you very much for your reply. I will try it based on your reply.
 

bidrohini

Feb 1, 2023
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Feb 1, 2023
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You can test with a multimeter before replacing to confirm the LED is the only issue.
 
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