A couple of weeks ago, I posted about fixing my son's laptop that stopped charging the battery and running off of the A/C adapter. I had isolated it to one component on the motherboard that I thought was a capacitor and took off to find a schematic or at least the part value.
Turns out the part was actually a ferrite chip. That makes the measurements I made pretty worthless when I was assuming it was a bad cap. Anyway, thanks to a remarkably quick response from ghn on http://www.notebookforums.com/, I was able to find http://lqv77.com/downloads/ which had a schematic for the laptop. From that I found that the part in question (FL1) was a ferrite chip BLM41PG600SN1L. I found it on Digikey.com at 0.54 for quantity 1. Of course I bought 5 - they are cheap and worth having on hand for future designs and repairs. Well, that and about another $50 worth of parts that I had on my wishlist for future projects.
I decided since it was not completely clear that the capacitor PC134 (.01uf 25v Ceramic in a 0402 package) wasn't a problem, so I replaced that also.
My hot air rework station came in handy for this. I cleaned up the pads with some additional solder and flux to get it to flow, then removed the excess with desolder braid. Soldering the ferrite chip (a 1806 package) was a piece of cake. The capacitor - not so much. The 0402 package is really small, making it ridiculously hard to hold it in place. I really need to get some really good tweezers to work with parts that small, and maybe a syringe of good solder paste for reflow soldering.
After a bit of fumbling, I managed to get it tacked down, then used the hot air to reflow it. I cleaned up the excess flux with some alcohol.
I connected the battery, and power switch board, then plugged in the power. The charging light came on, which I counted as a success.
It took me an hour or so to carefully reassemble the laptop, which has worked perfectly ever since.
For details on the troubleshooting process, see my previous post
Friday, June 15, 2012
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2 comments:
Great blog! I not only my eyes it is well written purely, How easy is it to information. Wondering how to notify me when new posts are made I. I subscribe to the RSS feeds you should do the trick! Have a nice day!
National Power Supply
Thank you, Vince. I ordered an used mother board and maybe didn't need it. I don't do a lot of electronics any longer, but as I'll have to remove the old mother board any way, guess I'll suit up for some diagnostics. Now, where'd I put my Fluke - lol.
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