Graham, you have the patience of a saint. One of the reasons I never really got into board level repairs is that sometimes, you just can't find the source of the problem, even with really good equipment (although that helps). Sorry that a reasonably priced replacement board is not available to you as that would be the cost effective fix in this case. As others have previously said, It's really enjoyable watching you work even if ultimately there is no good solution to the problem. Cheers mate.
@zyxnull4 жыл бұрын
It amazes me how Adam hasn't any microscope and yet he manages to work with his bare eyes and a lamp mounted camera, this guy is awesome! Also thanks for fail videos, from our side it is so frustrating not knowing
@paolomonai95114 жыл бұрын
The most probable thing is that trace connected to pin 2 of regulator (feedback if I remember well) is PCB internally shorted. You can prove this easily, testing for continuity pin 2 towards gnd, without the presence of the regulator. If there is continuity, you can try to isolate the pad under pin 2 with a cutter and connect through a wire feedback pin to the divider middle point. Hope this is clear...regards from Italy.
@dafox04274 жыл бұрын
The level of troubleshooting you do is nothing short of heroic. Do you know how many shops would've just told the customer that they need a new logic board and moved on with the replacement?
@AdamSNook.4 жыл бұрын
when ever i come across a blown chip i simply just search the internet and look at close up of the motherboards image to get the numbers
@felixlersha4 жыл бұрын
The customer should be more than satisfied with your efforts, especially after seeing the vid. Sometimes the device is just a lost cause even if you are an electronics repair genius with top notch diagnostic equipment and repair tools. If your labour rates weren't as darn reasonable as they are it probably wouldn't be even worth investigating, other than at a superficial level to ensure there isn't a quick and easy fix. Of course it still makes excellent material for a LFC video so thanks for sharing!
@jscancella4 жыл бұрын
Glenn Morgan yeah seriously, where I live the rates are so high you could have bought a whole new pc for the cost of the investigation he is doing!
@dilbyjones4 жыл бұрын
John Scancella obviously but sometimes that’s not the point
@DanielsGameVault4 жыл бұрын
I was expecting the ITE chip to be bad and cause excessive current draw on the 3.3v rail, thus heating up your regulator IC.....but then again, you said you had no short on 3.3v.....strange one, but yeah - I too would eventually throw in the towel since you're wasting more time than it's worth. Great vid as always. Always looking forward to failed repairs since it displays everyday situations a tech might come across, me included.
@davodamirajam12762 жыл бұрын
yes ite or pch chip
@michaelleeper36494 жыл бұрын
Thank you from across the pond. I am learning an incredible amount watching your videos and much of it has been applied.
@CXensation4 жыл бұрын
I remember from my my first commercial job after the airforce - back around '81 - we had a "Tone-ohm" in the workshop, to trace shortcircuited pcb tracks. Its a simple 4 wire milli-ohm tester with both a display and a beeper with a varying pitch according to the actual measured resistance. It had of course a range setting switch afair it had 4 selectable (milli) ohm ranges. It was easy to use and you quickly traced down a shortcircuited spot on a pcb.
@maxwarfield6699 Жыл бұрын
Where on the pcb, would you know to connect the wires? Asking ‘cause I’m a noob but I want to learn. Thanks
@CXensation Жыл бұрын
@@maxwarfield6699 To use a Tone-ohm you must already know 2 points from where you measure a shortcircuit. For instance on a 12Vpin to Gnd on a supply connector. Then you move one probe along one PCB track to find the lowest ohmic spot (lowest pitch tone). Repeat with the other probe and ypu will be guided to the shortcircuit.
@geoffreykeane40724 жыл бұрын
Hi Graham, the schematic you are using seems to date to 2007 (see 20:49 of the video). That predates even USB 3, so there must be a later schematic for the C55.
@RWL20124 жыл бұрын
I also saw "CPU Merom", which is a Core 2 Duo.
@stevec21964 жыл бұрын
I wonder where he got the schematic?
@jinujoseph13534 жыл бұрын
I am glad you published this video.. it goes to show that repairs are not an easy street and not everything can be diagnosed. Keep the videos coming. Cheers.
@azuararuiz Жыл бұрын
Put in your place, I would have arrived after reflecting; because I need a thermal camera (I see you already have one that you connect to the phone) and then also a support base for PCBs that I saw in panavise ... it's easy to say in hindsight but the decision would have been made right here, another way of To say it, this kind of motherboard problems has exhausted my patience. Thank you very much for sharing Graham and I mean that with absolute sincerity. All the best.
@STWILDERNESSADVENTURES4 жыл бұрын
And yet it was one of the most interesting videos in electronic fault detection. Thank you very much!
@wannabemgtow25403 жыл бұрын
I do agree it was one of the most interesting fault-finding videos I have seen as of yet.
@zachattack94534 жыл бұрын
Dude i cannot thank you enough for your channel....you have taught me so much and i cant thank you enough for everything you've done to my life!! Love your channel keep them up my dude luv ya like a brother xD
@silas1844 жыл бұрын
Keep the videos coming, even from the fails we learn! Admire your patience and for posting your fails as well!
@d3f4ultpl4y4s4 жыл бұрын
Back in the day I had similar problem. Drove me crazy. In my case I removed USB port itself and problem was gone. I assume there was something inside that port shorting stuff. In your case, its probably anyone guess.
@TheSauronchik4 жыл бұрын
1. USB short circuit is bad because it might lead to death of CPU or chipset. This? 2. Short circuit between layers under that regulator? 3. Some tiny capacitor or resistor somewhere on this line? 4. Gremlins? Good video! I'm waiting for a video about ALL of your tools. Especially poor man's microscope :) And you NEED a decent infrared camera.
@CM-xr9oq3 жыл бұрын
nah, IPA or freeze spray will do just fine. Rosin pens are another option..
@JmC0234 жыл бұрын
JP8102 looks melted into the PCB and dark on the edges at 10:12, I see under your tweezers, mentioned earlier where there was suppose to be "something" there but wasn't according to the schematic. Possibly remove the grounds on both USB Ports and not have USB (Isolation) may have (or may not if it's along the 5V Rail) been able to Power On. Great detective work sleuthing around by the way!
@lordbobrules4 жыл бұрын
Great channel. The boards for that model are under $40 all day long on ebay. I usually just replace them.
@trumanhw3 жыл бұрын
But the edu is far more valuable than the $40 either way. I'll be signing up (donating) to this channel
@peterr22773 жыл бұрын
what a lucky find, i am a bit of an electronics hobbyist, your presentation is 10 /10, the image as clear and easy to follow, the verbal description of whats actually going on is very good. i book mark this page
@BikeLifePinas3 жыл бұрын
Posting failures are rare these days. I appreciate this video upload as you are able to test your limits. hope there is a part 2. Watching this in Jun 2021
@AndroidPCMMORAW4 жыл бұрын
This is like finding a serial killer detective stuff style.
@морс-ф3д4 жыл бұрын
))))))))))))))))))))))))
@RumbleRepairs4 жыл бұрын
Really enjoying your repair series. I actually repair guitar amplifiers. Many of which have partial SMD layouts as well as the discrete stuff and ICs. Very clear and helpful methods. Please keep up the good work. All the best from Sligo, Ireland
@deelkar4 жыл бұрын
in the schematic the 1.8V Sense line from pin2 goes to a GMT_G2997F6U_MSOP10_10P chip, that itself controls voltages depending on power states, but it goes to a whole ton of other places. I don't think it's a sense line, more of a control line, because Pin2 seems to be T_ON
@williamdawson63514 жыл бұрын
possible shorted inter-layer trace can be hard to find
@Mustafay3sil4 жыл бұрын
Inject voltage => sprat ipa => turn on a powerful light across the board and find the heating area. ı could find the smallest size shorted cap with this method. (Of course ı got crazy before doing this :) )
@safn19494 жыл бұрын
Take laptop,add dynamite....fixed. Seriously,that thing is haunted. When I lived in the US ,getting a replacement MB was so easy I never got into board repair,that and my vision sucks. Great video,my friend.
@abduyusuf77294 жыл бұрын
hat off to you graham. am laptop chiplevel repair student from ethiopia. i learn a lot from you. no one teach us in such depth. thanks keep posting up
@riccardoz29534 жыл бұрын
then u should talk with other students and talk with the director, and send home the teachers. if u are a student of a chiplevel repair school and dont teach this... what are they teaching?
@baghdadiabdellatif15814 жыл бұрын
Hi Graham. Dont give up maybe use a jumper wire and eleminat the inter line trace that caused the short
@sydmichel4 жыл бұрын
low Impedance across the DC jack? Freudian slip perhaps?
@lesleymunro49644 жыл бұрын
you should look for pad 19 and pad 20 on the schematic, that could let you isolate and test the regulator output with no load on it. I think you need to trace the +V5A rail and see what it is feeding. Also, I did notice one of the small orange caps around the regulator you replaced looked cracked. Just left of the USB 0 ohm link. it looks two tone coloured. might be cracked/failed. worth checking. You did awesome troubleshooting steps though.
@jimmy917102 жыл бұрын
Please keep the FAILS coming, I think I like them more than the successes...Cheers.
@anks8884 жыл бұрын
After you have cleaned the solder from the sides you should reflow it again with flux to eliminate any bridges from the center pad. More than likely that's your short to ground on the feedback
@codcouch14 жыл бұрын
i was thinking the same thing
@Adamant_IT4 жыл бұрын
I had considered that, but when I removed the solder jumper on the back of the board, the short was removed from the feedback line, and continued on the separate net that wasn't on the schematic.
@robertcaldwell77374 жыл бұрын
@icedrinker8 multiple pads need reflow
@gumo774 жыл бұрын
@@Adamant_IT I'm curious if this method could work to find the short: www.analog.com/en/technical-articles/locating-shorts-on-power-planes-of-multi-layer-pcbs.html
@alexeypiterskiy81394 жыл бұрын
@@Adamant_IT Did you try to solder out the mosfet Q75 ( low side) and Q73 (high side) on your schematic. The shortage on 5V line could lead those mosfets to be burned/ And also pls measure the resistance of data line USB to gnd. Should be the same numbers for Data+ and Data-. Seek Thermal and Flir are great tools to find shortage in BGA chips and power mosfets
@brianduncan57584 жыл бұрын
Thank you for showing the torture, thank you for great technique
@UrosAndric4 жыл бұрын
You had it there. Just had to use thinner wires and trace it. Go for 2V and pump up the current as much as your power supply will give it to you but start with 1 amp and see how much and where the heat is. Then crank up the current if there is no noticeable heat. I had similar situation with one laptop which have dropped. I had interlayer connection on one spot. it was like weird resistance of 22ohms. My idea was to let the current thrue that part and see if the current will fall or will go up. Idea was to put enough current to burn that connection but not to high to weld tho layers together. I started with 1 amp and after a few minutes it fell to 0.9amp. then i pumped it back to 1 and so on. after halph an hour i was able to put enogh current there so burn that connection. the ressistance vent up to kiloohms and after i puged it up the voltage was restored to 12V. Unfortunataly i had one more circuit dead on that laptop so it is still not fixed, but i was able to sortthat short.
@josephking65154 жыл бұрын
Regarding the hot air temp, a channel I watch, Paul Daniels (no, *not* the magician) uses an 8mm nozzle, 450°C at 110 litres/per minute. Your channel is very interesting. Thank you for posting the videos. 👍
@rougeleroux68034 жыл бұрын
Even if you did'nt manage to fix it,still its entertaining to watch at the least and there's so much to learn
@fyremoon4 жыл бұрын
What I'd suggest is to test the voltage coming to that regulator, it looks like the bigger regulator is discoloured (top left) and if it is shorted and dumping 19v to the smaller regulator instead of reducing it to 5v, it could explain why the regulator is burning up.
@ebalcarcel4 жыл бұрын
Love all your videos and the way you explain things. You really give us a very clear way of how things work. I jus wonder why flux is not use when soldering and desoldering devices. Keep up your great work. I am learning a lot from you. Thank you very much for your time explaining thing!
@TheOneTonHammer4 жыл бұрын
Depending on the revision, the C55 motherboard is only $8.00 on eBay. Just replace it and add the old motherboard to your wall :)
@greenzero33894 жыл бұрын
That's exactly what I would have done. It's commendable the efforts Graham went to, to try and repair the board. Interesting video aside, time wise it would make more sense to replace.
@wthornton73464 жыл бұрын
Cheapest I saw on ebay was £34. Most were in the £50-£60 range. Rip-off Britain?!
@greenzero33894 жыл бұрын
@@wthornton7346 That isn't cheap !!! but not too bad if your labour is around £40/50 making the repair bill about £84
@@TheOneTonHammer I don't doubt it but I would have to pay mail and import charges! Lucky you, unlucky me!
@PapaMav Жыл бұрын
Watching listening to your Stream this past Saturday, I could not understand why the volume was so low on my C55-A (had the same problem last Mike's Unboxing Stream I was watching). Figured out the right speaker on the laptop has stopped working. Looking into cost of new speakers to see if worth the trouble of taking the bottom off.
@hadireg4 жыл бұрын
👍👍 great investigation Graham! lots of teaching. If I was rich I would have sent you a flir camera! thanks for your sharing
@MohamedElSayed-ql4ue4 жыл бұрын
I think the short may be in the other USB section in the top of the MB and the jumper connection is made to have a overall the 3 or 4 USB feedback lines so it's actively regulated sorry for bad grammar
@saintsaul25023 жыл бұрын
Its really tough to fix it You are great engineers and teaching it to all of the world , techniq connect to money and becoming rich but you want to teach your skill without fee, its great but sometimes you Should have to be commercial, its so hard to live without funds, thank you always for your Great lecture.
@pascalmathieu93324 жыл бұрын
Hi, thanks for the video. When you put alcohol, the two transistors at the top left also seem to warm up
@bulwinkle4 жыл бұрын
You would expect transistors to warm up as about 0.6v is dropped at the junction so they have an internal resistance.
@necro_ware4 жыл бұрын
Very nice though, sometimes it just doesn't want to be found. And thank you for sharing this, it is nice to know, that it's not only me, who fails sometimes :D Anyway, keep up doing great job!
@ElectroBotVideo4 жыл бұрын
Its really annoying that "engineers" took TWENTY years (1995-2015) until they standardized a USB connector that wasn't stupid. Yes, I'm aware that a dual sided connector is more expensive due to contacts at both ends, but they could have designed a connector like HDMI/DVI/VGA/etc. where its easily discernable which way it goes.
@Simon-ui6db4 жыл бұрын
Good shout out for Louis. Think it was watching his site yours turned up as a suggestion.
@SSchaeneman Жыл бұрын
I love watching your video's , they help me a lot, thank you
@babydust2me2052 жыл бұрын
Keep on vlogging, I always watching your videos, and I learned from you little by little
@alessandrozax2 жыл бұрын
I'm waiting for the 2nd part of this clip to see the solution..regards from Italy. 👋
@tanerriffat79634 жыл бұрын
Fantastic! They just keep getting better. I leaned heaps on this video. Thanks Adamant IT.
@dilbyjones4 жыл бұрын
These videos are really well explained
@ricardocosta39914 жыл бұрын
You cannot win them all mate... Enjoyed watching this one just as much as the other videos...keep up the good work.
@ikativan21104 жыл бұрын
Persistence is your middle name Graham. 😉😉 Thx for the detailed video!!! 👍👍
@concinnity12403 жыл бұрын
@31:15 Btw, when you installed that controller chip, it spun 90° from how you originally installed it!
@hardkore3603 жыл бұрын
noticed this as well!
@inframe31studiosphotocinem524 жыл бұрын
Time to donate somethings to this guy, he's actually run out of a time working just with that multimeter
@jamesvozar13 жыл бұрын
@Graham, would be funny if you made a service sticker that said, "its fine now!" haha thanks for all the great vids from Australia.
@fredwooding66622 жыл бұрын
Thank you So much for returning an answer to my question. Have a Great Easter 🙂
@Hagledesperado4 жыл бұрын
VCC doesn't have anything to do with constant current, it means collector voltage power rail. Conversely, VDD means drain voltage power rail. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IC_power-supply_pin
@Adamant_IT4 жыл бұрын
That makes a lot of sense, cheers!
@kwong834 жыл бұрын
Looks like the voltage regulator spun 90° when you blew it with the hot air and it ended with the wrong pinout
@killer61724 жыл бұрын
This is the very sad episode that I watch from you Adam..
@rajdev5554 жыл бұрын
hats off to your patience and dedication sir. advice: check boardview (.brd)file that will be helpful.
@metech-modernelectronics9684 жыл бұрын
You have to inject the 5 volts and the 3 volts coil so that you can find what is getting hot
@Marco9999An3 жыл бұрын
If you left that Jump opened maybe the short doesn t get the regulator IC pin. So it could have right feedback and work fine. With 3V_ALW and 5v ALW present, you have a chance to get Power on.
@jojitnartates24694 жыл бұрын
very informative. just upload fail or fix video. your one of my favorite tech.
@clems69893 ай бұрын
Well that was a fun ride to work, thanks.. Do a part 2 and Fix it . Come on man don't quit now.
@reggiedixon24 жыл бұрын
Enjoyable video, I agree with the idea that you probably learn more from stuff that doesn't go to plan.
@micflynn1Ай бұрын
could the short be coming back thur the 5V rail and into the voltage divider.
@jamesvozar14 жыл бұрын
Hope you get too read this mate, you have the best tech channel on youtube and deserve many many more subs. have being binging your videos for a week now. cheers james
@zx8401ztv4 жыл бұрын
Don't feel too bad graham, we all get dead end faults and it's not because you think you are not good enough to find the problem. Yep i have also fell for the wrongly named continuity mode :-(
@jesusyuca14834 жыл бұрын
I wonder if he ever got it fixed. I would have checked under whatever got burnt. I think the short is in the board. Btw I didn’t see a single bit of the video only heard it.
@DjResR4 жыл бұрын
10:06 - That D11G chip near the USB ports, looks like it has a death crater on it._
@silentium31713 жыл бұрын
I'm not a elecronist yet, but if the 2A usb chip shorted out, for 1x usb2 1xusb3, wouldn't have made more sense that you repairing it should pick up a 2.5 amp just so it accomodates the user that fried it ? Or you think the smps was rated at a maximum and as such only 2 amps can be drawn from that dual port ?
@maxwarfield6699 Жыл бұрын
How many of us, can truly say: “I am an elecronists!” Really?
@gustavocontreras6202 Жыл бұрын
Very good video, not all motherboards can be fixed, but this is a great video anyways, thanks
@FriendlyDigger4 жыл бұрын
Okay Okay, you've done your best and it doesn't work out, but then it's time to just put the thing aside. man that patience you have with this kind of work Yes of course you need that but still respect for your persistence
@tomaszpluta58393 жыл бұрын
Great, very informative video! You can learn a lot from failed repairs. Thanks, cheers!
@ignacio64254 жыл бұрын
short to ground check all capacitors in the ic outputs.
@danielmusat597 Жыл бұрын
Usually you don't need the whole schematic. In this case though, it is nice to have it. But you should know how to use it. That stand-by chip usually is at fault when it is hot. This time it was not. You certainly have a short on the 3.3V LDO side which feeds the RTC and a small part of the ECU. If you look in the schematic you can find that J... that you de-soldered and follow the line until you find the problem. The short on the feed-back line is your fault solely. You didn't assemble the chip correctly and made the short under the chip. That's why it disappeared when you removed the chip. When you have such a problem, remove the chip and make sure there are no shorts on LDOs first. Then reassemble the chip. Then look for enable pins for 3.3 and 5V rails. Then check to see if 3.3 and 5V are present. It was not the case here but this is the way to do it. Cheers!
@robinrochan9301 Жыл бұрын
Hi very nice video I learnt so much from you Is not failure videos video because Behind every failure. We have bigger success thanks 😊 👍👍
@petboule20102 жыл бұрын
i watched only two videos from your channel i already learned Enough even though you failed this one
@jaye76793 жыл бұрын
Perhaps a thermal cam may assist in these situations? iPadRehab sell the Seek (plugs into a phone) with a custom lens that shows high detail on PCB's
@rafaelulloa3204 жыл бұрын
Changing de voltage regulator worked for me, but it was too good to be true. I was formatting the hard drive and after one hour, it suddenly shut down, no led indicators, totally dead. When I inspected the mobo again, it didn't have any short circuit but I could hear a very soft ticking sound that I could not know where it came from, checked electrolytic capacitors and they where ok. Any idea what to check?
@trumanhw3 жыл бұрын
Could the laptop have started when you isolated (by removing) the "solder blob bridge" near JP8109 ..? ( @45:00 ) ..? (I'm here because I know nothing) ... While I'd definitely like to know how [you] learned what you know and importantly, what that process consisted of! ... such as: Did you start off breaking things at 6 & tried soldering at 8..? Or did you get sidetracked from EE major? Or however you learned practical application -- as well as the principles (physics fundamentals) and, how deep your academic knowledge is. Can you explain from both a Maxwell's Laws as and then show how and why switching over to ThermoDynamics (conservation, etc) ..? Or is Ohm's law & hands on (kinesthetic) adequate..? Whether that's too personal or just not your 'cup of tea' ... I'd really get a lot out of videos drilling down on YOUR approach to: - The "normal" vs abnormal SMD component behavior (pathology). - How do you follow AC path, as traces LACK "observable continuity" ...? -- Does this require accurate expectations to be confirmation with a multimeter (DMM)..? - Given frequent relevance & apparent importance of "short to ground" & "shorts" or "ground" generally warrants a DEDICATED video! -- The meaning? When / where it's expected? How's it identified? And, "rote" repetition with a series of boards (practice.)!! - PLEASE dedicate a vid to the significance of continuity, impedance, or other DMM modes. - Many small components look identical; how do you tell them apart? Color? Memorization? Or just testing (DMM)? - Do you have "crutch" concepts for inductors, caps, diodes, filters, etc., that better abet _intuition_ than _tech definitions_ do? PLEASE do a video *Discussing How You Developed Schematic-Literacy!* I'd assume you'd need a relatively fluent understanding of the component on a schematics before reading one makes 'sense' ..? As reading comprehension depends on a vocabulary & concepts of nouns, verbs, adjectives etc are to understand sentences... While a vocabulary of words abets sentence comprehension, inference skills of a paragraph or page is another (higher) level. Understanding a circuit within a schematic "a phrase in this metaphor" wouldn't provide macro level concept of how it works together. YOUR VIDEO'S STYLE OF ... _hands on, practical application simultaneou to asides with technical explanations are utterly UNIQUE! And more importantly, WITHOUT PARALLELE ... and exactly what I was LOOKING FOR! Dedicating videos to each of the above topics would be, if not the only instance on youtube..? IMO, by far, they'd still be the best. This is by far the most useful and valuable channel on this topic I've ever found.
@retrotech20204 жыл бұрын
Multi layer trace short would be my guess after all that. I'd have quit way before you did.
@Snowbag19984 жыл бұрын
That was a tough one. Great troubleshooting steps though !
@19mati674 жыл бұрын
I had the same issue with an Asus Q502LA and I could not figure it out. I have got another board, and now my HDD sometimes working and sometimes is not recognized. Very frustrated with this laptop.
@martinvaughan59536 ай бұрын
It seemed you had a lot of solder on the centre pad of the regulator
@ajaykumartargotra27683 жыл бұрын
For that 3v near battery connector, I guess battery it's self has inbuilt circuit in concealed battery case, for senses. If I am wrong please correct me. Support from Australia .thanks
@DavidLeeMenefee4 жыл бұрын
VCC = Voltage Common Collector...fyi... see 21:20 or there abouts
@KorAllRBare4 жыл бұрын
Going by the schematic @36:18 in the video, Q75 could be semi shorted to ground, so a check of voltages on pins 4 & 8 may clue you in as to where the high current is clamping the voltage/s down..
@KorAllRBare4 жыл бұрын
***Addendum*** Less likely, It could also be that Q73 may have a semi short, so a voltage check on pins 4 & 8 should eliminate what is not drawing the high current.. Bare in mind I am only getting a glimpse of the schematic and a vague Idea as to what capacitors resistors & semiconductors have been eliminated by them not being shorted.. Did C857 definitely check out OK? components to check, recheck because if these are shorted a Fet or both Fets will warm/heat up along with the chip controlling them via the feed back loop or VFB1 R930 R931 C852 C861 C865 C914
@Dutch-linux4 жыл бұрын
check Q75 that fet can also pull the rail to ground if C852 and C861 are ok then only Q75 can be at fault when it is shorted in the D > S channel if you remove L72 and the short is gone its the fet by removing the L72 you disconnect both fets that is easier then removing both fets for testing.
@ndumisodube764 жыл бұрын
keep them coming very educational l love all your motherboard repair videos best videos
@ndumisodube764 жыл бұрын
sometimes l wish you post evryday
@GlishaSo2 жыл бұрын
One question for you @AdamantIT can you please tell us or show us which "poor man camera microscope" you use ? :) screen looks amazing but looks like you don't have some crazy big microscope camera for that. Thanks a lot if you answer me! Big fan !
@GlishaSo Жыл бұрын
thanks for no answer :D
@TreyWait4 жыл бұрын
Power surge on the USB data line, goes straight to the SMC, blown SMC
@WayWorthRacing4 жыл бұрын
Would a thermal image camera be able to help in these situations to find heat where there shouldn’t be or because everything is so tiny it would just look like one big heated mess lol, Just a thought ,FYI im a wood worker not an electrical engineer, just throwing my 2 cents in.
@Adamant_IT4 жыл бұрын
Depends, very small shorts don't heat up enough. But I do need a thermal cam for general shorts, and plus you never know what it might reveal about rabbit hole issues like this.
@ionutnedelea7808 ай бұрын
Hi Graham can you tell as please where do you find the schematics for mother's thanks 🙏
@Cordiaturbo3 жыл бұрын
I have the same chip getting hot and I too replaced it and it made no difference. Still working on it. ...
@gunnarsandstrom80314 жыл бұрын
U remind me of my self have been fixing computer for 19 years started with fixing computers from the junkyard. 😎
@RIDDX20104 жыл бұрын
This is another classic highly interesting walk through... Great Work... irrespective on success. I think I would have cooked the friging board 5v 3A its the current that kills... At £10 for a like for like board might have been worth it. surely the Q11G NEEDS TO BE REPLACED as i guess its (USB chip) is linked to the feedback? couldn't see this from the schematic I would also ask the nice people from Toshiba : D
@mohammadmansour6954 жыл бұрын
Hello dears, I have a Dell Inspiron N5110 with no display problem. The main power LED is lit (on power key/and front LED) when plugged in or on Battery but nothing is displayed, CPU Fan is ON and heat is felt after a while as normally running laptop. I am posting this comment on this video because the problem occurred just after plugging a USB WIFI stick into one of the USB ports. I tried to output on an external display but that did not work. I watched few of your videos and I was really impressed with your way of explanation and analysis. I do not know your name yet, but can call you the Smart Guy. If you do not mind let us Fix this Dell as well. I disassembles the laptop, and examined visually any burnt components on the VGA/USB parts, but could not find any thing. What are your recommendations and guide lines to find the fault?