Good day everyone,
Let me preface this with letting you know that I have a smalltime computer repair shop but do not have a lot of experience when it comes to board diagnostics. I am good at soldering etc but finding the issue if there isn't an obvious burnt component is not my strong suit.
The other day I got a customer come in with a macbook A1990 (motherboard 820-01814-A) that would not turn on and had previously been getting the warning message that the battery needed servicing. (Most folks seem to ignore that message, just like the check engine light in vehicles.)
First thing I did was make sure the usb-c ports were clean which were dirty so I cleaned those. Once clean, I then checked if the power was reaching the board by measuring voltage on the PP20V_USBC vbus test pads (XA, XB, TA, TB).
While the charger is connected to the pad's corresponding usb port, I get 5.1V instead of 20v while showing 0V on the non-corresponding test pads.
This goes for all of the test pads, except for the XA test pad which shows 2.6V-2.7V while the charger is connected to any of the non-corresponding usb ports and 5.1v when the charger is connected to the corresponding usb port.
Then I checked F7000 and F7001 both of which have unstable resistance readings, starting out in the 1 to 3 mega ohms range while slowly lowering, then jumping down to 1 kilo ohm and slowly lowering, then jumps to 40 to 60 kilo ohm range and slowly rises, then jumps back up to the 1 to 3 mega ohm range and the cycle sort of repeats from there. Voltage to ground for both F7000 and F7001 with only battery connected is 17.6mV and with the charger also connected, the voltage to ground becomes 12.26V.
Hope someone here has the patience and time to guide me through diagnosing this board to find the problem. (if the board is the issue to begin with and not the charger, I do not have another original apple usb-c charger to test with, just a lenovo 19.5V usb-c charger which I am hesitant to even test with.)
Sincerely,
Rick.
Let me preface this with letting you know that I have a smalltime computer repair shop but do not have a lot of experience when it comes to board diagnostics. I am good at soldering etc but finding the issue if there isn't an obvious burnt component is not my strong suit.
The other day I got a customer come in with a macbook A1990 (motherboard 820-01814-A) that would not turn on and had previously been getting the warning message that the battery needed servicing. (Most folks seem to ignore that message, just like the check engine light in vehicles.)
First thing I did was make sure the usb-c ports were clean which were dirty so I cleaned those. Once clean, I then checked if the power was reaching the board by measuring voltage on the PP20V_USBC vbus test pads (XA, XB, TA, TB).
While the charger is connected to the pad's corresponding usb port, I get 5.1V instead of 20v while showing 0V on the non-corresponding test pads.
This goes for all of the test pads, except for the XA test pad which shows 2.6V-2.7V while the charger is connected to any of the non-corresponding usb ports and 5.1v when the charger is connected to the corresponding usb port.
Then I checked F7000 and F7001 both of which have unstable resistance readings, starting out in the 1 to 3 mega ohms range while slowly lowering, then jumping down to 1 kilo ohm and slowly lowering, then jumps to 40 to 60 kilo ohm range and slowly rises, then jumps back up to the 1 to 3 mega ohm range and the cycle sort of repeats from there. Voltage to ground for both F7000 and F7001 with only battery connected is 17.6mV and with the charger also connected, the voltage to ground becomes 12.26V.
Hope someone here has the patience and time to guide me through diagnosing this board to find the problem. (if the board is the issue to begin with and not the charger, I do not have another original apple usb-c charger to test with, just a lenovo 19.5V usb-c charger which I am hesitant to even test with.)
Sincerely,
Rick.
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