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Laptop Repair: WRONG Customer DIAGNOSIS! #shorts

Laptop Repair: WRONG Customer DIAGNOSIS! #shorts #laptoprepair #pc

#Laptop #Repair #WRONG #Customer #DIAGNOSIS #shorts

“Parts-People.com, Inc”

A Dell Precision 5530 laptop, recovered from an e-waste company, arrived for repair with a reported faulty USB-C port. Although the initial diagnosis suggested a simple port replacement, further inspection revealed that the port could detect USB devices but not power the laptop. Suspecting a…

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29 Comments

  1. I just recovered my mother's HP laptop this week. A mosfet went bad as well and it stopped charging. I put in another stick of RAM, changed her 2.5in HDD to a nice SSD, and installed a BE200 wifi card (and also had to tear apart the screen assembly to install new antenna for that… That one was interesting). Besides being able to charge it again, the thing went from being a hunk of junk that worked but never worked well to being a very usable and capable machine. From around 2min boot times and constant freezing to 20 seconds and running like a dream.

  2. I'm curious: What software do you mainly use for complex repairs, such as detecting faulty cells in batteries and testing laptop RAM? I'm trying to open up a de-facto repair business in my high school and I want to try to put my soldering skills to work for this sort of stuff.

  3. call me crazy but ive never seen that other greatest technician that's ever lived do chip soldering like the greatest dell technician that's ever lived has…👀

  4. I absolutely love the older Precisions, except for the webcam being in a weird location and the hinge issue. I've saved numerous older Dell XPS and Precisions from that exact issue

  5. While I appreciate you up cycling those donor boards’ parts to use in your repairs, why don’t you just replace with brand new mosfets? I feel like in general, if you’re replacing a small SMD component such as a mosfet, IC, diode, etc., best practice is to replace with a brand new component, since desoldering from a donor board can more often than not damage the components. But, if you have a high success rate with that method, props to you sir!

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