I have a toshiba laptop satelite series c55-a-1h9 with a burnt item on pcb motherboard which is responsible for backlight display. the short came after installation of cable lvds and broken the leg with the v+ of backlight and made this short . the lvds cable replaced and i have working display now but not backlight. the problem is i dont know what was the component that burned in order to change it. voltage i have in this points of burned item at up side 19v and dropping and from down i have steady 19v . can anyone help me? i shall post some photos to see.
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TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
Originally posted by mcplslg123 View PostThats a coil in 0603 size. Do measure the resistance to GND on both pads of this coil before soldering a new coil. One of the pads may be shorted.
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
As per suggestion in post #3, remove all power. Meter in resistance mode. Measure the resistance to ground of each pad of this missing and burnt part.
More suggestions are:
1) replace with any 0603 size ferrite bead with high enough current support to power this lcd backlight. Recommend at least 1A-3A to be safe. For example, see MaxEcho in Taiwan for ideas. The values are not critical.
2) a better option is to place a resettable smd 0603 fuse here so this event does not repeat in the future. The fuse will stop a high current event and self-heal after the event is removed.
3) if really in a pinch and 100% sure there is shorting fault on these 2 pads or the display then you can just apply a short across these 2 pads. Note that this can lead to more damage if the fault is not fixed.
Summary, some event caused the missing part to act like a fuse and was destroyed. Likely the magnet wire of the coil heated up and was burnt from the excessive current draw.
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
Originally posted by mon2 View PostAs per suggestion in post #3, remove all power. Meter in resistance mode. Measure the resistance to ground of each pad of this missing and burnt part.
More suggestions are:
1) replace with any 0603 size ferrite bead with high enough current support to power this lcd backlight. Recommend at least 1A-3A to be safe. For example, see MaxEcho in Taiwan for ideas. The values are not critical.
2) a better option is to place a resettable smd 0603 fuse here so this event does not repeat in the future. The fuse will stop a high current event and self-heal after the event is removed.
3) if really in a pinch and 100% sure there is shorting fault on these 2 pads or the display then you can just apply a short across these 2 pads. Note that this can lead to more damage if the fault is not fixed.
Summary, some event caused the missing part to act like a fuse and was destroyed. Likely the magnet wire of the coil heated up and was burnt from the excessive current draw.
Comment
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
Originally posted by mon2 View PostAs per suggestion in post #3, remove all power. Meter in resistance mode. Measure the resistance to ground of each pad of this missing and burnt part.
More suggestions are:
1) replace with any 0603 size ferrite bead with high enough current support to power this lcd backlight. Recommend at least 1A-3A to be safe. For example, see MaxEcho in Taiwan for ideas. The values are not critical.
2) a better option is to place a resettable smd 0603 fuse here so this event does not repeat in the future. The fuse will stop a high current event and self-heal after the event is removed.
3) if really in a pinch and 100% sure there is shorting fault on these 2 pads or the display then you can just apply a short across these 2 pads. Note that this can lead to more damage if the fault is not fixed.
Summary, some event caused the missing part to act like a fuse and was destroyed. Likely the magnet wire of the coil heated up and was burnt from the excessive current draw.
Comment
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
Then this coil is not a filter coil for EMI but rather for a switching power supply and a replacement coil will be required.
Trace this part to the nearby IC which will be the power rail switching controller. Post a clear pic and/or topside markings for a review. Ideally we can identify the switching power controller and then locate a datasheet to learn more about this missing inductor.
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Re: TOSHIBA BACKLIGHT MAINBOARD C55-a-1h9
Originally posted by Boyxba View PostI put a conductor but makes short circuit and does not start the laptop after removing it it works without backlight and the port of vga works fine.. On 40 pin of lvds has 3.3v...can I make backlight to work without taking signal from motherboard
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