The reason this may be happening could be a fault in the connection between the pixels and the power supply, not allowing to pixels to receive the proper voltage. One way you could attempt fixing this would be to apply pressure to the broken pixels when the camera turns on; this has been known to re-seat the pixels into place. If you have any other questions, try referring to our [[Canon EOS Rebel T5 Troubleshooting|Troubleshooting Page|new_window=true]]
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The reason this may be happening could be a fault in the connection between the pixels and the power supply, not allowing to pixels to receive the proper voltage. One way you could attempt fixing this would be to apply pressure to the broken pixels when the camera turns on; this has been known to re-seat the pixels into place. If you have any other questions, try referring to our [[Canon EOS Rebel T5 Troubleshooting|Troubleshooting Page|new_window=true]].
The reason this may be happening could be a fault in the connection between the pixels and the power supply, not allowing to pixels to receive the proper voltage. One way you could attempt fixing this would be to apply pressure to the broken pixels when the camera turns on; this has been known to re-seat the pixels into place.
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The reason this may be happening could be a fault in the connection between the pixels and the power supply, not allowing to pixels to receive the proper voltage. One way you could attempt fixing this would be to apply pressure to the broken pixels when the camera turns on; this has been known to re-seat the pixels into place. If you have any other questions, try referring to our [[Canon EOS Rebel T5 Troubleshooting|Troubleshooting Page|new_window=true]]
The reason this may be happening could be a fault in the connection between the pixels and the power supply, not allowing to pixels to receive the proper voltage. One way you could attempt fixing this would be to apply pressure to the broken pixels when the camera turns on; this has been known to re-seat the pixels into place.