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2023년 9월 22일에 출시된 iPhone 15의 수리, 분해 및 문제해결 정보입니다. 6.1인치 OLED 디스플레이, 48MP 듀얼 카메라 시스템, 그리고 USB-C가 특징입니다.

LCD panel replaced causing reboot loop?

Hello,

I just replaced my slightly cracked screen by a LCD panel. After following the iFixIt tutorial (note: doesn't mention replacing the proximity sensor), I'm stuck in a reboot loop. The touch screen, FaceID and other functionalities seem to be functioning correctly besides that.

According to this thread:

https://fr.ifixit.com/Réponses/Afficher/...

it seems to be related to the SMC/TrueTone verification failing. Is this the issue ? In that case, would adding the proximity sensor back fix the issue ?

thanks in advance

Edit:

Here's the a couple of screenshots of the panic logs

Block Image
Block Image

The screen was a In-Cell LCD display according to the documentation of the product: iPhone 15 screen Fix Kit

Replace a scratched or cracked front panel glass digitizer screen or a malfunctioning display. 이미지

제품

iPhone 15 Screen

$169.99

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Max, rather than guess at the cause, I suggest you pull up the latest panic log and find out exactly why the phone is rebooting. I still maintain that SMC/True Tone verification isn't a thing, at least not something that would cause a boot loop.

Go to the Kernel Panics wiki page and use that to locate your panic logs.

iPhone Kernel Panics - iFixit

Screenshot or copy & paste the first page of your log, then come back and edit your question to add that information.

Adding images to an existing question - iFixit Repair Guide

Once we have more information based on your log, we can point you in the right direction on how to fix your phone.

Update (01/15/26)

By the way, I'd like to clarify your meaning when you use the term LCD. For a very long time, all phones were made with LCD displays, so people have gotten used to calling the display an LCD - even when it's not. Most newer, higher end phones including iPhones are using OLED displays these days, but there are still plenty of phones using actual LCDs.

In the post you referred to, the OP actually replaced his OLED screen with an aftermarket LCD display, so they were correct in calling it an LCD because it was. There are many of those available, as they are far cheaper to manufacture than OLED displays, but the display is going to be both thicker and require more power due to the need to add a backlight, which OLED displays don't require.

Anyway, I would like to ask if you really mean an actual LCD display, or if you're just calling an OLED replacement screen an LCD?

Update (01/18/26)

Okay, your panic log is showing error code 0x100000. There's another wiki page regarding the SMC Panic Assertion Failed kernel panic here.

iPhone SMC Panic Assertion Failed - iFixit

According to the information, here's what your code means.

iPhone Model: iPhone 15 and 15 Plus

Sensor Array: 0x100000

Likely Issue: Front Sensor Assembly *

*Replacing the front sensor assembly will disable True Tone and auto brightness functionality, even when using an original Apple screen. Face ID is also disabled, unless the iPhone is running iOS 15.2 or newer.

So yes, if the new screen didn't come with the Ambient Light Sensor/Proximity sensor front sensor assembly and you didn't transfer it from your old screen, then yes, this is exactly the error you're going to get, and it will keep boot looping to infinity and beyond until you install or replace that assembly.

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Thanks for the feedback, I've edited the original post to include more details. I think it's indeed an LCD display. I've added the link to the product in the original post.

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If you didn't transfer the proximity sensor to the new screen, then that would most likely cause the issue you're experiencing.

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Max 영원히 감사할 것입니다.
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