

I tried fixing it by just prying those key caps off and replacing them with the key caps from my old keyboard that I had removed. The only problem I had with the keyboard is that two of the keys didn't sit properly in the frame, and would catch/click when I pressed them (the Y and the C keys). There were a few keys that were going to be very tricky to do without, so I bit the bullet and bought THIS keyboard to replace the faulty replacement keyboard that I had just put in.

Several more keys weren't working, even if I pressed really hard. I bought a new keyboard from another vendor here on Amazon, but once I had it installed, it was WORSE than my old keyboard. I had to replace the battery in the laptop, and since it's such a painstaking operation that requires the complete disassembly of the computer to do that, I figured I might as well replace the faulty keyboard while I was in there. I've had this laptop for about 5 years, and over the last year there had been a few keys on the numberpad that were dying - they'd only work if pressed very hard. I bought this replacement keyboard to replace the replacement keyboard that I had bought to replace the original keyboard.
