Hi Victor
Try these  suggestions they might help
The first step in repairing any laptop or notebook is troubleshooting the 
problem accurately. For example, some people will run out and buy a new 
battery
on the assumption it's failed when the problem is a frayed wire or a bad 
connector on the power cord, something that can be fixed with a little 
solder
or electric tape. Likewise, a "dead" LCD screen could be a mainboard or 
video adapter failure, a bad inverter or a burnt out backlight. When the LCD 
itself
needs replacing, it will probably be due to a physical crack in the glass or 
blocks of dead pixels. If your CD or DVD drive won't work anymore, make sure
you've tried a selection of discs and try a cleaner kit before replacing the 
drive, and always double-check the connection before discarding the old 
drive.
About the only problems that will identify themselves as imminent failures 
are increasingly loud hard drives or steadily decreasing battery life over 
time.

There's very little difference between troubleshooting a Dell Latitude, 
Toshiba Satellite, Sony Vaio, IBM Thinkpad, HP Pavilion (and Compaq) or even 
an
Apple Powerbook or iBook. The basic designs of all of these laptops are the 
same, even if one model uses an Intel CPU, another an AMD,a third a PowerPC
and a fourth a low power Transmeta. A technician troubleshooting Toshiba 
laptops may be more like to start with the battery, as they are notoriously 
weak,
just as troubleshooting HP and Compaq notebooks often begins with the RAM. 
However, it's a mistake to approach any notebook problem with a preconceived
notion of the outcome rather than following a logical process of 
elimination. Just because one model of Dell tends to blue blotches on the 
screen when
it ages doesn't mean that Dell kept manufacturing notebooks with the same 
problem. IBM and Sony and Apple laptops have generally been viewed as the 
higher
quality than the more popular brands, but they all suffer similar failures 
due to overheating, wear and tear, and the occasional run of bad components.

Power Failure

The troubleshooting process always starts with identifying what works. If 
the problem is power related (whether battery or a question of the laptop 
not
turning on) the first step is establishing that power is getting to the 
laptop. This means checking that the LED on the transformer brick is lit, 
and if
it isn't (or doesn't have an LED), that it's plugged into a good power 
outlet. You can check that by unplugging the transformer and simply plugging 
in
a lamp. Some of the oldest notebook models have an internal transformer, so 
the line power (110 VAC in the U.S., 220 most other places) goes directly 
into
the laptop body. The next question is whether or not any of the little LED 
status lights on the laptop light up with the power plugged in. Even the 
oldest
models usually have a power good status light. If you have positive power 
status and the notebook simply won't turn on, the next check is the battery.
Some models of notebooks will not operate without a good battery installed, 
but most will, so Google up your particular model with a search like 
"operating
without battery" and find out if your laptop will operate with a dead or 
missing battery. If the battery isn't an issue and the laptop still won't 
turn
on one with the power good status light lit, it could be a switch failure, 
but it's more likely a power regulation or mainboard failure. 
Troubleshooting
power regulation or the motherboard requires test equipment or spare board 
to swap out, and is beyond the scope of these articles.

Battery life is special subset of power problems that has as much to do with 
poor designs as actual component failure. The older NiCd batteries were 
particularly
susceptible to "memory" issues. If not full discharged after every charging, 
the battery cells begin to remember their previous charge level as a new 
maximum,
and some individual cells may even reverse polarity while the batteries are 
being charged. Ni-MH (Nickel Metal Hydride Battery) which replaced NiCd 
(Nickel
Cadmium) for standard models are somewhat better, but they can't fight 
poorly designed charging circuitry or bad software controls. All laptop 
batteries,
whatever the shape, consist of a number of low voltage cells connected in 
series to reach the required operating voltages. You can
rebuild a notebook
battery (it voids the warrantee:-) but it's usually not cost effective.

It pays to go online and read the owners manual for extending the life of 
the battery in your particular laptop model if you didn't do so when you 
obtained
it. Some older notebooks require that you cycle the battery continually, 
only working on AC power for as long as it takes to recharge the exhausted 
battery.
Many newer models want you to fully discharge the battery around once a 
week, but otherwise don't care about leaving it plugged in the rest of the 
time,
and newest designs don't care what you do as long as the laptop actually 
gets run on battery for a reasonable percentage of the time. If you think 
your
battery is running down too fast, make sure you have enabled the aggressive 
power saving modes in software (usually accessed through Control Panel or 
the
manufacturers icon) which dim the screen, slow the CPU, and let the hard 
drive spin down when unused. Also, keep in mind that the level of estimated 
battery
life remaining that causes an onscreen alarm can be set by the user, and if 
your default setting is very conservative (between 10% and 20%), you may 
want
to experiment with a lower level (between 3% and 5%) that will still give 
you time to save your work and shut down before the laptop goes into 
hibernation.

Video Failure

The first thing to check in cases of complete video failure is the power 
status, as detailed above. If you can always hear your laptop fan when you 
turn
on the laptop and now you can't it's not a video failure, it's a power or 
mainboard failure. The next troubleshooting step is to connect an external 
monitor
with a standard VGA connector, whether a CRT or an LCD. If your notebook 
won't light up the external monitor, it's extremely likely that either the 
motherboard
or the internal video adapter (if it's not part of the mainboard) has 
failed. If the video adapter is a discrete component and you can find a 
replacement
for under $100, it might be worth gambling on replacing, but it's almost 
never cost effective to replace a mainboard. There is a small chance that 
the
internal connection to the external video port has coincidentally failed 
with the laptop's own video subsystem, but it's not all that likely.

If the external monitor works fine, your failure is with the laptops video 
subsystem, which is usually contained entirely in the screen/lid assembly. 
There
is a decent chance that one of the cable bundles (video signal or power) 
that run through the hinges to the video subsystem has failed, so unless the 
failure
is obvious (cracked screen, fading in a corner, faint image, bad pixels), 
you should still open up the main body of the laptop as well to visually 
inspect
the connections. The easiest problem to identify is obviously a cracked LCD, 
but a slowly increasing number of dead spots or whole rows or columns on the
screen indicates the the actual LCD assembly is bad.
Replacing the LCD
is pretty much the same on most notebooks,
Dell has a nice backlight design,
the real challenge is getting the lid open and removing it without breaking 
anything.

.

If your screen brightness seems to flicker or sometimes is bright and 
sometimes almost fades out completely, even then the unit is plugged into 
the wall
(don't get fooled by power saver mode), then you probably have a failing 
inverter or backlight. Between the two, the inverter is several times more 
likely
to fail, it plays the role of the solid state ballast in modern fluorescent 
lights. The backlight itself is a CCFL (Cold Cathode Fluorescent Lamp) with
a very long meant time between failure, while whole generations of inverters 
have been lemons on some laptop models, you can easily research your model
on Google. I did an illustrated guide to
how to replace an inverter or backlight
on a Toshiba notebook, the process is similar for any laptop.

Laptop Fan Failure

The guts of a laptop are crammed into such a small, cramped space, that the 
cooling fan is absolutely critical. A replacement laptop fan and heat pipe 
should
cost well under $50, you may even get by with a generic fan replacement for 
a few bucks, but the job is fairly involved and differs from manufacturer to
manufacturer. I don't get excited about noisy laptop fans, I had one in my 
Toshiba Satellite that got noisy within a year of my buying it and continued
noisy for the next four years without failing. On the other hand, you don't 
want to wait until you get heat damage to replace the fan. If the fan gets
increasingly noisy over time or starts noisy (and slow) then quiets down as 
it picks up speed, I'd replace it at the first opportunity. Assuming you've
owned the notebook for a while, you should be familiar with how long the fan 
usually takes to come on and how long it runs. If the fan never comes on,
unless you're working in a freezer, it's probably dead. I just did a page on 
troubleshooting laptop CPU overheating problems and inspecting the laptop
fan for linting or failure/

Hard Drive Failure

Fortunately, laptop hard drives are the one really generic part (aside from 
most memory) that you don't have to worry too much about replacing. I just 
pricewatch
or call dirtcheapdrives and buy the closest capacity match, which is usually 
somewhat larger. Depending on the model, you may be able to really upgrade
to a much bigger drive on a replacement, but you probably won't get the 
benefit of a faster interface on an older notebook and the BIOS may not 
recognize
most of the capacity, so there's no point in spending much more than you 
have to. Laptop hard drives can be extremely easy to replace or moderately 
difficult.
The difference lies in how they are accessed. Many older notebooks allow you 
to replace the hard drive through a single-screw access panel on the bottom
of the unit, sometimes it's right under the battery or the RAM. Other 
laptops require that you crack the body open, remove the keyboard or the 
motherboard
(assembly varies from manufacturer to manufacturer), really take the whole 
thing apart. The interface for the IDE cable on the drives that come out 
easy
is often fixed in place, so the drive basically plugs in, while the drives 
that require you to take the whole thing apart often make remove the 
connector
on a flexible (and fragile) flat cable before removing the drive. I have an 
illustrated guide on
how to replace a laptop hard drive
of the easier type:-)

Ports and Power Connector

Laptops are sometimes plagued by internal failure of the physical 
connectors, like the modem or network port seems to be detached within the 
case, making
it tough to get a good connection, or the power connector solder joint to 
the board breaks. The only way to fix these problems is to open up the body 
of
the laptop, determine exactly what has broken, and do your best to restore 
it to the original condition, rather than just kludging it. The problem with
kludging anything in a notebook is that the tolerances are so tight that 
your kludge might fail as soon as you snap the case back together. When 
soldering
anything on a laptop board, use a fine tip iron and don't gamble on 
overheating the board and stripping away circuitry. Use a decent solder 
sucker to quickly
clean up the old solder rather than fooling around with copper wick, and if 
you get the feeling you're taking to long, just stop and let it all cool 
down
before trying again.

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Victor Gouveia" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Blind Handyman Listserv" <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006 11:18 AM
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Question for the Engineers


> Hi All,
>
> I recently came across a problem that is forcing me to go to a 
> professional for help...Yeah, I know, I've used the dirty word...
>
> Anyway, my problem is this...
>
> I think my motherboard is fried on my laptop, but I have no way of making 
> sure that it is or not.  I mean, let's face it, there must be a hundred 
> reasons why a computer won't boot up.  Suffice it to say, that the 
> computer does get power to it, I can here things running in the 
> background, but the hard drive stays put, and I don't here any sounds from 
> it.  My brother says he does not see any lights emitting from the hard 
> drive light, and at some point, the laptop just sits there looking at me, 
> like it's waiting for me to make the next move.
>
> My brother thinks it might be the motherboard, or a controller on the 
> motherboard.
>
> My question is, whether a person can check if the motherboard is working 
> properly or not, without actually having to rip it out of it's current 
> location and putting it into another computer, or laptop, as the case may 
> be.
>
> Can one check this sort of thing with a continuity tester to make sure all 
> of the connections are alright, or if it's fried, to check if there's a 
> break in the circuitry.  This does not have to be done through a blind 
> person, at this point, I would accept help from a sighted stand point, if 
> anything, just to save me the expense of paying someone 50 to 60 bucks an 
> hour to look at an overgrown paper weight.
>
> Anyway, your help would be much appreciated.
>
> Victor Gouveia
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
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>
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>
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>
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> -- 
> No virus found in this incoming message.
> Checked by AVG Free Edition.
> Version: 7.1.405 / Virus Database: 268.12.1/440 - Release Date: 9/6/2006
>
> 



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