Replacement display assembly for iPod Photo (4th Generation). Use it for cracked, blank, lined, or backlight-related display problems after separating screen damage from ribbon seating and board-side faults.
Product Overview
This screen listing covers Replacement LCD Screen (Late 2004 / Early 2005) and its own connector path on the iPod Photo (4th Generation).
Use the Compatible Variants table below to confirm capacity, color, case, or order-number fitment.
Choose this part when your iPod shows backlight not working, White Screen, or Black Screen; the checks below help confirm the right part before you order.
Choose Your Option
This part comes in multiple variants. Confirm your iPod's capacity, case depth, and order number before ordering.
What Is Included
Quick Diagnosis: Is It The Replacement LCD Screen (Late 2004 / Early 2005)?
Start here before ordering. Work through the checks in order; a symptom alone does not prove this screen is bad until nearby parts, cables, fitment, or install issues are separated.
Before you order this screen
- Try a force restart first. Toggle Hold on and off, then hold Menu + Select/Center for 6 to 10 seconds.
- Try Disk Mode or restore isolation. Confirm the iPod still plays, charges, or is recognized so the screen-late-2004 symptom can be separated from a dead device.
- Reseat and inspect the connector path. Inspect the display ribbon and connector if the iPod has been opened or dropped.
- Use this listing only after the checks still point here. If the symptom still points here after those checks, compare Compatible Variants before ordering this screen.
- Match this screen to the 820-1642-A logic-board family; the two Photo/Color Display screen revisions are not treated as interchangeable.
- Confirm the capacity match before ordering: 30GB, 40GB, 60GB.
- Confirm the case thickness before ordering: thick, thin.
- Late 2004 / Early 2005 Photo-family LCD route.
- Match with logic-board marking 820-1642-A.
Specifications & Fitment
Also known as iPod with color display (Apple's official name after June 2005).
Part Details
| Detail | Value |
|---|---|
| Model Number | A1099 |
| EMC | EMC 2022 |
| Condition | Used — factory original Apple part. Normal cosmetic wear expected. |
| Display Size | 2" |
| Resolution | 220x176 |
| Type | Color TFT |
Compatible Variants
| Order Number | Capacity | Color | Case | Compatible | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M9829LL/A | 30GB | White | thin | Yes | — |
| M9585LL/A | 40GB | White | thick | Yes | — |
| M9586LL/A | 60GB | White | thick | Yes | — |
| MA215LL/A | 20GB | White (Harry Potter Collector's Edition) | thin | Check fitment | Compatibility was not present in legacy fitment data; verify before publishing. This variant has not been verified yet. |
| PS492AA | 30GB | White (HP) | thin | Check fitment | Board marking must match 820-1642-A; if the board reads 820-1764-A, use the Mid-2005 Color Display LCD instead. This variant has not been verified yet. |
| M9830LL/A | 60GB | White | thick | Check fitment | Board marking must match 820-1642-A; if the board reads 820-1764-A, use the Mid-2005 Color Display LCD instead. This variant has not been verified yet. |
| PS493AA | 60GB | White (HP) | thick | Check fitment | Board marking must match 820-1642-A; if the board reads 820-1764-A, use the Mid-2005 Color Display LCD instead. This variant has not been verified yet. |
| MA127LL/A | 20GB | Black/Red (U2) | thin | No— wrong Photo revision | iPod Photo board/LCD revisions are not interchangeable; use the matching board and screen revision Use Replacement LCD Screen (Mid-2005 Color Display) instead. |
| MA079LL/A | 20GB | White | thin | No— wrong Photo revision | iPod Photo board/LCD revisions are not interchangeable; use the matching board and screen revision Use Replacement LCD Screen (Mid-2005 Color Display) instead. |
Failure Signs
Use these checks to decide whether this screen is the right part, whether a nearby part should be checked first, or whether the symptom needs more diagnosis.
Ribbon, connector, or ground-path checks
What you may see: A symptom starts after opening the iPod or disturbing an internal flex cable.
Check first: Inspect for liquid, corrosion, residue, torn flex material, or connector damage.
Most likely cause: Connector seating, ribbon damage, or ground-path issues can involve this part, a nearby connector, or a board path.
Look elsewhere when: Check the Replacement Battery when power, charging, runtime, or swollen-battery behavior is the main problem.
- Check the Replacement Click Wheel when controls, wheel, center/select, menu, hold, or unresponsive-button symptoms are the main problem.
Liquid, corrosion, or residue context
What you may see: Symptoms follow liquid exposure, dirty contacts, corrosion, or residue.
Most likely cause: Liquid or corrosion can involve this part, a nearby connector, or a board path.
Symptoms changed after repair or reassembly
What you may see: People describe a new problem appearing immediately after battery, storage, display, audio, or control work.
- A new symptom appeared after battery, storage, audio, display, or control work.
Check first: Reopen only as far as needed to inspect the areas touched during the repair.
- Compare the new symptom with what worked before the repair.
- Check cable seating, latch position, and part variant before replacing a second part.
Most likely cause: A post-repair symptom can involve the display, but disturbed ribbons, latches, grounding, connector seating, or the wrong variant part are common checks before ordering again.
- Check post-repair regression, connector seating, and board-side damage before ordering.
- Choose this display only when the part itself was torn, creased, or damaged during service.
- Correct seating, latch, or variant problems first.
- Replace the display when the repair damaged that assembly or its flex path.
Look elsewhere when: Check the exact connector or assembly disturbed during the repair before treating the new part as failed.
Fitment or model-variant mismatch
What you may see: People ask whether a similar-looking part from another model, capacity, or generation will work.
Check first: Match the exact model, generation, capacity, and case style shown for the product.
- Do not use a symptom to override fitment: a wrong-variant part can create new symptoms after installation.
Most likely cause: This display may help only when it matches the model and variant being repaired.
- Use the display variant matched to the exact iPod.
- Recheck fitment before diagnosing a newly installed part as defective.
Look elsewhere when: Check fitment before replacing nearby parts or ordering another copy of the same wrong variant.
Blank, white, black, lined, or backlight display
What you may see: People describe a blank screen, white or black display, missing backlight, lines, or a display that changes after impact or repair
Check first: Confirm you are ordering a color display for the iPod Photo, not a monochrome display for the 4G
- Confirm the iPod still plays, charges, or is recognized so the screen symptom can be separated from a dead device
- Inspect the display ribbon and connector if the iPod has been opened or dropped
- Look for cracks, liquid residue, display discoloration, or connector damage before ordering
Do Not Buy This Screen Yet If...
| Situation | Start here instead |
|---|---|
| Variant or capacity does not match this listing | Use the Replacement LCD Screen (Mid-2005 Color Display) listing instead. |
| Charging, swelling, runtime, or power is the primary problem | Start with the battery, charger, and power checks when charging, runtime, swelling, or no-power behavior is the main problem. |
| The problem is the Hold switch or headphone jack, not this part | Verify the Hold slider, lock indicator, and shared headphone/Hold cable before replacing this part. |
| Recent service or connector disturbance is the main clue | Inspect the connector, latch, ribbon, or assembly disturbed during service before buying another part. |
| A symptom points to a different part | The other iPod Photo / Color Display board-and-screen revision. |
Install Overview
Before You Start
For pre-open diagnosis, unlock Hold and use this generation's reset sequence if needed. Before opening, lock the Hold switch so the orange bar is visible, then confirm the model and variant.
Treat case opening as the highest handling risk. Work around the seams gently and stop if the shell, clips, or internal stack resist.
Do not pull the halves apart or side-load board sockets. Reseat nearby ribbons and connectors before blaming a replacement screen.
Repair Guide
Show all 14 installation steps
Before you open the iPod, confirm that the hold switch is in the locked setting. The orange bar should be showing, indicating hold is active.
Move an opening pick as far as possible into the gap between the plastic front and the metal back panel, on the right edge of the iPod. You may have to rock the pick back and forth to move it in farther. With the opening pick, lever up against the plastic front panel and release 5 retaining tabs. Slide the pick along the iPod edge and keep levering gently until the remaining retaining tabs release. In this step, after all five tabs along the right edge are free, the case should easily open.
The iPod case is now open, but do not separate the two halves yet. An orange ribbon cable still connects the headphone jack to the logic board. With the dock connector edge at the top, open the case like a book and set the rear panel beside the iPod front half.
With a plastic tool or your fingernails, carefully detach the orange headphone jack cable. Make sure to draw straight up on the connector, not the cable itself. This fragile ribbon cable can stay connected for a battery replacement. Prop and tape the rear case against a box so the headphone jack remains connected to the motherboard without straining its cable while you work.
Grasp the hard drive with one hand and carefully detach the orange ribbon cable from the hard drive with your other hand. In this step, if the cable doesn't come free easily, it may be useful to gently wiggle the cable from side to side.
Peel up and back the black adhesive strip covering the hard drive ribbon cable.
With a fingertip or spudger, carefully flip up the black hard drive cable connector on the logic board. The black retaining clip rotates 90 degrees toward vertical in the cable direction.
Draw the orange hard drive cable directly out of its connector.
Carefully detach the white battery connector from the logic board. Pull only on the connector housing, not the cables.
With a spudger, flip up the black retaining bars holding the display and click wheel connectors to the logic board. On an iPod Photo, the display connector sits more centrally on the logic board.
Take out the 6 black T6 Torx screws holding the logic board to the front panel. If you have an iPod Photo, there can only be 5 screws, as you will find no screw in the top right corner of the iPod.
Move the orange click wheel ribbon cable out of its connector. Unlock this connector first: the locking mechanism sits on the opposite side of the cable entry and swivels upward 90 degrees. Lift the locking mechanism with a plastic spudger.
Carefully raise the large end of the logic board, then detach the display connector. Raise the logic board out of the iPod.
Lift the display panel free and remove it from the device. Mild adhesive may still attach the display to the front panel.
After This Repair
| Check | What to do |
|---|---|
| Test image and backlight | Check the display before closing the case fully, then confirm brightness and image stability after reassembly. |
| Watch for pressure | New spots, lines, or bowing after closing usually means the internal stack or ribbon routing needs another look. |
| Still not working? | Reseat the display ribbon and inspect the connector before treating the replacement screen as bad. |
Frequently Asked Questions
Use these questions to narrow the part path before ordering. They keep each answer focused on a different diagnostic or fitment decision.
What Replacement LCD Screen (Late 2004 / Early 2005) models does this fit?
This Replacement LCD Screen (Late 2004 / Early 2005) fits: M9585LL/A (40GB White), M9586LL/A (60GB White), M9829LL/A (30GB White).
Do I need to solder?
No, this installation does not require soldering. Difficulty: Moderate. Estimated time: 20–30 minutes.
How do I know if this LCD screen needs replacement?
Symptoms that can point to this LCD screen include: backlight not working, White Screen, Black Screen. Check fitment, connectors, and nearby parts before treating symptoms as proof.
What should I check before replacing this screen?
Reseat the display ribbon and inspect the latch before replacing the LCD. Check whether the iPod still plays or syncs so a display-only symptom stays separate from a dead-device route. Choose this screen only when the display panel or flex remains the isolated failure. Check disturbed ribbon and connector paths first when the symptom began after service.
Can water damage, liquid, or corrosion make this screen the right repair path?
Inspect the display connector and nearby board area before replacing the screen. Do not treat a new LCD as confirmed when corrosion remains active on the connector or board. This screen may help only after the display connector and board-side corrosion risk are controlled. Check corrosion and connector damage first when liquid history is present. Liquid-damage work may require professional cleaning or board repair before parts replacement is reliable.
Why people land on this part
Use the checks above to separate this screen from nearby parts before ordering.
Some buyers search for "cracks", "discoloration", "blank screen, white or black display, missing backlight, or lines on the screen", "blank screen, white screen, black screen, or missing backlight", "lines, discoloration, or image corruption on the lcd", or "screen image changes after impact or repair"; confirm the checks above point to this same part before ordering.
Also searched as: iPod photo 4th generation LCD screen replacement, iPod color screen, screen is white, screen is black, no display, no backlight, black horizontal lines, display ribbon fully seated, fix iPod screen, iPod Photo display replacement, iPod Photo LCD, iPod Photo replacement screen, iPod screen, dead pixels, battery white screen, replaced battery, iPod Photo parts, iPod with color display, A1099, Screen goes blank during restore, screen goes white, backlight not working, blank screen, screen storage restore problem.
Symptoms people describe
- after battery replacement
- battery white screen
- corrosion damage
- replaced battery
- ribbon seating
- screen liquid
- screen post repair regression
Fitment wording people compare
- M9830LL/A
- MA079LL/A
- MA127LL/A
Worth Knowing
- Display: 2" color TFT 220x176
- Display specs vary by revision; match the removed LCD, ribbon, and board/display family before ordering.
You May Also Want
Inspect the battery and display connector while the iPod is open.
Related: Flash Storage Mod (iFlash IDE Adapter + SD Card)Flash storage is the common upgrade path while the iPod is already open.
Related: Replacement Hard Drive (60GB)Use a hard drive only when restoring original-style storage; use the model's flash-storage path when a compatible adapter path is available.
