{"id":47,"date":"2006-10-11T18:37:06","date_gmt":"2006-10-11T22:37:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/scott.sherrillmix.com\/blog\/electrical-engineer\/toshiba-satellite-a70-power-problems\/"},"modified":"2007-12-12T01:57:14","modified_gmt":"2007-12-12T05:57:14","slug":"toshiba-satellite-a70-power-problems","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/scott.sherrillmix.com\/blog\/electrical-engineer\/toshiba-satellite-a70-power-problems\/","title":{"rendered":"Toshiba Satellite A70 Power Problems"},"content":{"rendered":"

Laptop Repair Guy<\/a> points out that Toshiba has issued a warranty extension<\/strong> resulting from a class action lawsuit<\/a>. As far as I can tell (I’m not a lawyer so better check for yourself) I’m out of luck since I’m in Canada but definitely better to have Toshiba fix it for free than try yourself.<\/span><\/p>\r\n

My Toshiba Satellite A70 started having power problems several weeks ago. Although the power cord was plugged in, the computer was not charging and was draining the battery. The little ‘plugged-in’ LED would come up but the battery status LED would still show power coming from the battery. I could jiggle the power cord and it would come back up so I ignored it and got used to jiggling. Unfortunately, the power got more and more touchy and I spent more and more time jiggling the stupid power cord. I first guessed it must be something with my power adaptor but (after cutting open the outer wrap of the cord), I finally put it together that the ‘plugged-in’ LED was coming on but not the battery charging light. This seemed pretty odd. So I finally went out and bought a multimeter. For $20 it was a really good investment and I wish I would have bought one several hours of jiggling frustration earlier. Anyway after the multimeter showed the cord was giving the appropriate 19V without any interruptions, I finally got the bright idea to google the problem and found out that this is a common problem<\/a> for the A70. Although I have soldered maybe once in my life, the repair didn’t look all that difficult so I thought I’d give it a shot. I ran out and grabbed a crappy Radio Shack iron for $15 and a pack of resistors and circuit board to practice on for $10. You could skip the practice if you were already confident in soldering.<\/p>\r\n\r\n

The website How to dismantle a Toshiba A70<\/a> is invaluable for this task. I just thought I’d add a few notes to their steps:<\/p>\r\n