The Laptop Repair Workbook
Copyright 2012 by Morris Rosenthal
All Rights Reserved
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One day your laptop may refuse to power on even though the AC adapter is
plugged in. You've probably noticed that your laptop features an LED that
lights up when live power is attached and the battery is charging, usually
on the front of the laptop body. Older power adapters may also have a status
LED to show they are functioning. The AC adapter may have failed if it's
plugged into a good power outlet and the cable ends are securely seated in
both the adapter and the laptop but power LED doesn't come on. Yet it's more
likely the failure is the power lead from the adapter to the laptop. Your
laptop may use a straight plug, like Toshiba and Lenovo, or an "L" connector
like some Compaq and HP models, or a special proprietary design like some
Dell and Sony adapter. The straight in power connectors probably have the
highest failure rate because the cord often droops at a sharp angle.
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Try wiggling the cord a few inches back from the laptop jack and and see
if the power LED on the laptop blinks. If the LED is unsteady or if it only
lights if you position the cord a certain way, either the receptacle in the
laptop or the wiring to the connector has failed. If you could choose, a
bad cord is a much easier problem to repair, and that's what the illustrations
on this page describe. Sometimes you won't see any sign of damage on a bad
power cord no matter how closely you look because the insulation is unbroken.
But the stranded wire inside the insulation could have frayed to the point
that it only makes intermittent contact and melts open from current. The
cable is normally shielded coax, with the inside conductor soldered to the
inside of a barrel connector, and the coax shield soldered to the outside
of the barrel connector. The solder joints are inside the molded plastic
connector.
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The AC power cord that attaches the adapter to a wall outlet almost never
fails as long as it's plugged in solidly. Laptop power cords usually include
a ferrite choke to help prevent RF generated in the laptop from flowing back
up the ground shield and turning it into a broadcast antenna. If it's too
close to the molded connector to allow for replacement, I cut it off and
hope nobody complains about interference. While you can always strip coaxial
cable with a knife, it pays to own a decent wire stripper so you can make
a clean job of it. I remove around 1" of the insulator from the braided shield
and then twist the wires together off to one side. Classy technicians may
tin the braid with a little solder before proceeding, but it's not really
necessary if the connector has a tab with a hole.
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There's no point trying to reuse the original molded connector unless you
are absolutely desperate, in which case you'll be stuck shaving away the
plastic with a box cutter. I've had to do this while overseas when I couldn't
find a replacement, but it was a bit of a mess since the ground braid was
soldered directly to the outside barrel of the connector on the Toshiba I
owned. And it can be tough to resolder manufactured connectors without melting
everything because they aren't intended for multiple use. In the U.S. you
can still find barrel connectors at Radio Shack, but bring along the original
connector and the laptop to make sure you get the size right. You can often
find the exact inner and outer diameter in millimeters (they're all metric)
by searching on the Internet for AC adapter product descriptions for your
laptop.
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Before you solder on the new connector, make sure you slide the plastic shell
onto the cord in the proper orientation. It won't fit over the connector
after the fact and you'll have to unsolder it all if you forget. If the shell
doesn't fit onto the cord or your new connector doesn't include a shell,
you can fake one up with many turns of electric tape. I generally leave enough
room so the connector can fit into the laptop power jack as far as it will
go, but good electrical contact is made before it's completely seated. In
the picture I show the yellow inner conductor of the coax soldered to the
tab that corresponds the center conductor of the barrel connector. The silver
braid is soldered to the tab which corresponds to the outside of the barrel
connector. You can use heat shrink tube over the tabs, if you have it, or
even use a couple heat shrink layers in place of a shell.
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I tend not to trust the connector shell so I work a little electrical tape
in between the two tabs to make sure they can't get crushed together and
short. The trick is leaving enough room to get the shell over it all. The
shell can be screwed onto connector since both pieces are threaded. After
my first experience when I was forced to carve up a molded connector with
a razor blade while travelling, I starting keeping a spare ready made in
my laptop case. If the AC adapter cord I'm using fails, I can just cut off
the end and splice on the replacement by twisting the wires together. The
main failure mechanism for these cords is from the cord drooping down and
flexing around when you work on your lap or run the laptop at the edge of
a table.
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The problem shown on this page, a frayed or broken power adapter, is easy
to diagnose. But most laptop issues benefit from careful troubleshooting
before you rush to spend money on parts. The Laptop Repair Workbook is focused
on troubleshooting laptop hardware. It includes an introductory section on
all power and charging related problems, followed by an advanced flowchart
for troubleshooting battery charging and AC power operation. The 191 page
printable eBook version can be purchased for instant
download anywhere in the world at about half the cost of buying the paperback
and paying for shipping.
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