Hi folks,
I've got a 17" Toshiba C875-S7304 laptop. It's motherboard is a:
Hannstar J MV-4 94V-0 :239
E89382
PLF/CSF/CSR UMA MB
It's close to the board in this thread: https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=28897, which is a PLF/CSF/CSR DSC MB but in places it almost seems to be a mirror image of the pics there.
I'm not good at this stuff, so probably I'm looking for general guidance and a idea of how hard it would be to fix this.
If I place a good battery into the unit, it will run on the battery. With a dead battery, or no battery, the DC line-in will not power the unit at all. No neon lights, nothing. Oddly, though, when I place a charged battery into the machine, with the DC-in line attached, the orange charging light comes on.
I tested the voltage and found that the laptop's external remote DC jack is delivering full voltage to the MB DC input jack. My guess is that something on the MB prevents that voltage from reaching and charging the battery. Perhaps a blown fuse.
No idea how to proceed, or if I should try. I'm going to attach some board shots.
Thanks,
Paul
I've got a 17" Toshiba C875-S7304 laptop. It's motherboard is a:
Hannstar J MV-4 94V-0 :239
E89382
PLF/CSF/CSR UMA MB
It's close to the board in this thread: https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=28897, which is a PLF/CSF/CSR DSC MB but in places it almost seems to be a mirror image of the pics there.
I'm not good at this stuff, so probably I'm looking for general guidance and a idea of how hard it would be to fix this.
If I place a good battery into the unit, it will run on the battery. With a dead battery, or no battery, the DC line-in will not power the unit at all. No neon lights, nothing. Oddly, though, when I place a charged battery into the machine, with the DC-in line attached, the orange charging light comes on.
I tested the voltage and found that the laptop's external remote DC jack is delivering full voltage to the MB DC input jack. My guess is that something on the MB prevents that voltage from reaching and charging the battery. Perhaps a blown fuse.
No idea how to proceed, or if I should try. I'm going to attach some board shots.
Thanks,
Paul
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