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motherboard cpu power section check
My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery
only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 T5300 5648B999 SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 |
motherboard cpu power section check
Mike De Petris wrote:
My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 T5300 5648B999 SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious for having power connector problems. I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 1:43*pm, Ken wrote:
Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 * *T5300 5648B999 *SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 * * * * I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. *I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. * * * * Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious for having power connector problems. *I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 13, 1:43Â*pm, Ken wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 Â* Â*T5300 5648B999 Â*SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 Â* Â* Â* Â* I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble Â* Â* Â* Â* shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. Â*I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. Â* Â* Â* Â* Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious for Â* Â* Â* Â* having power connector problems. Â*I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 4:23*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 1:43*pm, Ken wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 * *T5300 5648B999 *SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 * * * * I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble * * * * shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. *I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. * * * * Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious for * * * * having power connector problems. *I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- thank you, anyway please consider the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:25:13 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 13, 4:23Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 1:43Â*pm, Ken wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 Â* Â*T5300 5648B999 Â*SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 Â* Â* Â* Â* I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble Â* Â* Â* Â* shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. Â*I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. Â* Â* Â* Â* Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious Â* Â* Â* Â* for having power connector problems. Â*I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- thank you, anyway please consider the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages Had no way of knowing since you didn't mention these additional facts in your original post. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 6:41*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:25:13 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 4:23*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 1:43*pm, Ken wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 * *T5300 5648B999 *SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 * * * * I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble * * * * shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. *I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. * * * * Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious * * * * for having power connector problems. *I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- thank you, anyway please consider the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages Had no way of knowing since you didn't mention these additional facts in your original post. I'm sorry, I'm just forgetting pieces as I wrote this long story many time in different newsgroups and forums, and still need to find a solution. Anyway I can still use the laptop on battery, or giving 12V with an ATX PSU in place of the positive battery pole, leaving other battery contacts in place. |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 10:14:22 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 13, 6:41Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:25:13 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 4:23Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 1:43Â*pm, Ken wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 Â* Â*T5300 5648B999 Â*SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 Â* Â* Â* Â* I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble Â* Â* Â* Â* shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. Â*I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. Â* Â* Â* Â* Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious Â* Â* Â* Â* for having power connector problems. Â*I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- thank you, anyway please consider the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages Had no way of knowing since you didn't mention these additional facts in your original post. I'm sorry, I'm just forgetting pieces as I wrote this long story many time in different newsgroups and forums, and still need to find a solution. Anyway I can still use the laptop on battery, or giving 12V with an ATX PSU in place of the positive battery pole, leaving other battery contacts in place. Usually those things run off a 19 volt 95 watt PSU. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 13, 6:41 pm, Meat wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 09:25:13 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 4:23 pm, Meat wrote: On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 04:55:24 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 13, 1:43 pm, wrote: Mike De Petris wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 T5300 5648B999 SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 I don't know about acquiring a schematic for trouble shooting the MB, but the first thing I would do is test the power adapter with a load attached. I have repaired several that output the correct voltage but failed to regulate when loaded down. Also, some Toshiba Satellite computers were notorious for having power connector problems. I trust this computer does NOT have such a problem? no problems on the connector tried different power supplies, even stabilized laboratory psu Did you try cleaning the air ducts? When on batter the CPU 'may' be at a reduced clock speed via Toshiba Power Management when on battery. When on the PSU, the CPU will go to full speed and may just be over heating. Food for thought -- thank you, anyway please consider the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages Had no way of knowing since you didn't mention these additional facts in your original post. I'm sorry, I'm just forgetting pieces as I wrote this long story many time in different newsgroups and forums, and still need to find a solution. Anyway I can still use the laptop on battery, or giving 12V with an ATX PSU in place of the positive battery pole, leaving other battery contacts in place. Have you looked at the MB power bus (+5v I would assume) for ripple when you attach the external power supply? |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 9:54*pm, Ken wrote:
* * * * Have you looked at the MB power bus (+5v I would assume) for ripple when you attach the external power supply? this is what I am asking for, I tought I should measure it at the socket pin holes, how can I idetify the +5V line on the motherboard? And how would you measure (and fix the cause) a ripple on the bus? I have a couple of scopes and multimeters for that, but how? |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 9:13*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
Anyway I can still use the laptop on battery, or giving 12V with an ATX PSU in place of the positive battery pole, leaving other battery contacts in place. Usually those things run off a 19 volt 95 watt PSU. yes of course, but this motherboard does not like it any more, 12V from the battery (or external, faking the battery connector) is still ok instead |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 13, 9:25*am, Mike De Petris wrote:
... the laptop is completely teared a part, non problems of air flow, and when connectinh power it locks immediately even if in the BIOS pages There's a second CPU (a little tiny one) that handles the power sequencing. The 'BIOS pages' are only for the big CPU, it's that little battery-monitor one that runs into some kind of trouble, and it has that problem every time the external power is applied and it tries to do the natural thing, run the computer from external power and charge the battery. Somehow it senses overvoltage or overcurrent and shuts down. Look for small-value current sense resistors that are open, or for semiconductor switches that are shorted (can't turn off). There are often PMOS power switch transistors involved. Also, look for fuses (they might not LOOK like fuses, though). Battery charge current might be channeled through a switchmode regulator, those have always had problems if a capacitor fails. |
motherboard cpu power section check
Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 13, 9:54 pm, wrote: Have you looked at the MB power bus (+5v I would assume) for ripple when you attach the external power supply? this is what I am asking for, I tought I should measure it at the socket pin holes, how can I idetify the +5V line on the motherboard? My guess is the hard drive is operating on +5v. You could measure it there. And how would you measure (and fix the cause) a ripple on the bus? I have a couple of scopes and multimeters for that, but how? First determine if it has ripple. You can normally take a volt meter set for AC and measure the ripple on a DC bus. Old VOM's used a cap to isolate the AC from the DC component, but the new DVM's generally work for this. If you did find ripple, look for a cap that is bad or possibly a diode that is shorted. First determine if it exists. |
motherboard cpu power section check
A schematic of the Toshiba A205 series can be found in this forum:
www.reepair.net/en Here's a really good website about Toshiba laptops: www.IrisVista.com |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 14, 2:47*am, "larry moe 'n curly"
wrote: A schematic of the Toshiba A205 series can be found in this forum: * *www.reepair.net/en Here's a really good website about Toshiba laptops: * *www.IrisVista.com great !! thank you, will have a deep reading |
motherboard cpu power section check
"Mike De Petris" wrote in message ... My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. I want to check the motherbard in search for the faulty component, where could I find pinouts and voltages to check for? Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) Laptop Motherboard: MAIN BOARD 945GM. Main Board 945GM EXC+51 CA+MIC MDC 1310A2120812 Alternate Part Numbers: V000108030 Processor: LF80537 T5300 5648B999 SL9WE 1.73/2M/533 INTEL... copyright 06 try here http://www.reepair.net/en/forumdispl...top-Schematics zack |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Fri, 13 Aug 2010 01:56:24 -0700 (PDT), Mike De Petris
wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/Batteries-and-Power/Laptop-will-only-run-on-battery-freezes-when-the-ac-is-plugged/m-p/114865 (5 pages). Lots of good suggestions some of which include successful repairs. Mo http://www.fixya.com/support/t2946491-freeze_when_power_cord_plugged_in http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/Batteries-and-Power/Laptop-shuts-down-as-soon-as-adapter-plugged-in/td-p/114041 I've seen this twice and fixed it more by accident than by intent. In one case, I left the battery out of the laptop, and no charger plugged in, for about a weekend. When I returned on Monday, everything magically worked normally. In the 2nd case, I was trying various combinations of starting the computer, with the battery, without the battery, with both, etc. At one point, it magically started working. That was about 1-2 years ago, and both customers are still using the laptops. However, I have another Toshiblah laptop in the office with similar (not identical) problems, that I can't fix. It also won't charge the battery, although it will run on battery if I charge it in another laptop. The problem was traced to a crappy BGA soldering job on the video chip. Try booting from battery in Safe Mode, and then plug in the charger. If that works, then it's probable that you have a video chip soldering problem. (I'm debating the merits of buying an overpriced hot air rework station. I borrowed one, liked it, but had to return it). Please do not tinker with external power supplies unless you're absolutely sure you're using the correct power plug, and the correct voltage. I've seen what's left of the laptop when the clip leads get swapped, or the power supply mysteriously got to maximum. It's not pretty. The correct power supply is 19v 3.4A negative ground, 5.5/2.5/12mm connector. -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 15, 6:03*am, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) thanks to your suggestions, I did a BIG step forward, I had a try at this: "In SafeMode Goto control panel-- device manager--- goto processor---- disable one of the two processors -- reboot normally. This FIXED the problem, but 1processor is not really a great fix; more of a work around." And IT WORKS, pc is now running on external power at the moment, a thing that I've never seen on it. I tryed disabling a cpu core in BIOS in the past unsuccesfully, but disableng from devmgmt.msc fixed it. I do not think it can be a ripple problem because it did not boot at all when connected on power, but who know? Still have to understand if it is: - faulty cpu - faulty cpu power section - bad cpu/other microcode I would try to see with scope and multimeter but still don't know exactly what and where to look for. |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 02:12:28 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 15, 6:03Â*am, Jeff Liebermann wrote: My laptop freezes when I connect the power cord, works well on battery only. Toshiba Satellite A205-S4577 (PSAF0U-01Q009) thanks to your suggestions, I did a BIG step forward, I had a try at this: "In SafeMode Goto control panel-- device manager--- goto processor---- disable one of the two processors -- reboot normally. This FIXED the problem, but 1processor is not really a great fix; more of a work around." And IT WORKS, pc is now running on external power at the moment, a thing that I've never seen on it. I tryed disabling a cpu core in BIOS in the past unsuccesfully, but disableng from devmgmt.msc fixed it. I do not think it can be a ripple problem because it did not boot at all when connected on power, but who know? Still have to understand if it is: - faulty cpu - faulty cpu power section - bad cpu/other microcode I would try to see with scope and multimeter but still don't know exactly what and where to look for. Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow
wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 -- Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558 |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote:
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 15, 6:46*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 15, 6:46Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...-Monitor.shtml All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 16, 2:45*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...oard-Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 06:28:47 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 16, 2:45Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...o/Motherboard- Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault I'd have to assume that Toshiba still uses a proprietary ACPI interface. My Satellite 1905-S301 has it's own Toshiba power management console. I doubt it's the CPU but rather the ACPI hardware. If it is the CPU and you get a cheap replacement that would be great, I would be wrong and it wouldn't be the first time. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 06:28:47 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 16, 2:45Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...o/Motherboard- Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault I'd have to assume that Toshiba still uses a proprietary ACPI interface. My Satellite 1905-S301 has it's own Toshiba power management console. I doubt it's the CPU but rather the ACPI hardware. If it is the CPU and you get a cheap replacement that would be great, I would be wrong and it wouldn't be the first time. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 16, 3:55*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 06:28:47 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 16, 2:45*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...o/Motherboard- Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault I'd have to assume that Toshiba still uses a proprietary ACPI interface. My Satellite 1905-S301 has it's own Toshiba power management console. I doubt it's the CPU but rather the ACPI hardware. If it is the CPU and you get a cheap replacement that would be great, I would be wrong and it wouldn't be the first time. I will give it a try as I found a cheap CPU, I'll test it and will resell it in case, but at least I will be sure mine is ok. As "ACPI hardware" seems to be guilty, where should I look for on the motherboard and what should I check first? There are so many small capacitors around... may it be a custom chip? |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 07:15:02 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 16, 3:55Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 06:28:47 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 16, 2:45Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...o/Motherboard- Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault I'd have to assume that Toshiba still uses a proprietary ACPI interface. My Satellite 1905-S301 has it's own Toshiba power management console. I doubt it's the CPU but rather the ACPI hardware. If it is the CPU and you get a cheap replacement that would be great, I would be wrong and it wouldn't be the first time. I will give it a try as I found a cheap CPU, I'll test it and will resell it in case, but at least I will be sure mine is ok. As "ACPI hardware" seems to be guilty, where should I look for on the motherboard and what should I check first? There are so many small capacitors around... may it be a custom chip? Good question. Maybe a program like Belarc Advisor could tell you what device(s) is/are responsible. I think it's another freeware app so you may check it out. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 16, 6:51*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 07:15:02 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 16, 3:55*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 06:28:47 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 16, 2:45*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 01:17:03 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 15, 6:46*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 09:25:04 -0700, Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Aug 2010 15:13:09 +0000 (UTC), Meat Plow wrote: Is that a dual core CPU or hyperthreaded single core. 1.73GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Mobile T5300 Ok it's got two cores. Reason I asked was disabling say a 2 ghz single core HT CPU can acutally boost performance. When in HT mode the RAM and the CPU process at 1 ghz. After the "cpu disabled trick" worked well for hours, with laptop running and restarting with it PSU, I had no more luck. The day after it didn't start as before. Tried the trick again, I even disabled both cpus in devmgmt but no luck. Used an hardware monitoring program to investigate situation but nothing helps, only curious thing is that trying to access ACPI temperature values the pc suddenly powered down. Even when all seems running weel on battery, or "fake battery" with 12V PSU, the pc freezes at a point in some conditions that I still have to determine, but to me this shows it's an hardware fault. When running on normal PSU in Windows 7 I tried to change the options for the power/tilt/sleep buttons and the pc freezed, and that was when it didn't worked any more that way. Power buttons options can be changed without problem running on battery.. On battery the pc can run for hours, but it seems that stressing it a bit and leaving it alone leads to a freeze or a sudden power down, maybe when the power management decides to do something, something that I cannot know as I simply find the pc hanging on or completely powered off. I must check the motherboard, but except for ONE capacitor in the power section that is 3 or 4 mm big (and still smd) all others are small SMD, and you can just identify them by being marked Cnumber as I think all resistors are Rnumber. The problem is I need to find a day with plenty of time, as to test those capacitors needs to unweld them with hot air check and solder them again, and they are soooo small... there are smd three-legs transistor components too, but I do not think I would be able to check them. Maybe I should start with the few fuses and resistors as they can be checked in place to see if they are opened, at least. You seem to have a decent strategy in place. Have you thought about installing a software program that can monitor CPU core and other voltages? I've used Motherboard Monitor on desktops, it may work on your Intel based board. And it's a free utility. http://www.softpedia.com/get/System/...o/Motherboard- Monitor.s... All motherboards have some sensors and/or other ACPI based sensors. thank you, I tried one but didn't give me voltages, all other values are normal, accessing ACPI temperatures leaded to a sudden power off, will have a try with other monitoring software in the while I'm also looking a cheap compatible CPU, I am still not that sure it's a mainboard fault I'd have to assume that Toshiba still uses a proprietary ACPI interface. My Satellite 1905-S301 has it's own Toshiba power management console. I doubt it's the CPU but rather the ACPI hardware. If it is the CPU and you get a cheap replacement that would be great, I would be wrong and it wouldn't be the first time. I will give it a try as I found a cheap CPU, I'll test it and will resell it in case, but at least I will be sure mine is ok. As "ACPI hardware" seems to be guilty, where should I look for on the motherboard and what should I check first? There are so many small capacitors around... may it be a custom chip? Good question. Maybe a program like Belarc Advisor could tell you what device(s) is/are responsible. I think it's another freeware app so you may check it out. what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: 8.1m Windows Logon: mike Operating System System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY(NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy 1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) 79,92 GB 67,18 GB free Network Drives None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) Printers local user accounts last logon mike 17/08/2010 07:21:31 (admin) local system accounts Administrator 14/07/2009 06:53:58 (admin) Guest never HomeGroupUser$ 17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning On None discovered Communications Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller primary Auto IP Address: 192.168.178.29 / 24 Gateway: 192.168.178.1 Dhcp Server: 192.168.178.1 Physical Address: 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: 192.168.178.1 Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 10:56:58 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: 8.1m Windows Logon: mike Operating System System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY (NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy 1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) 79,92 GB 67,18 GB free Network Drives None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) Printers local user accounts last logon mike 17/08/2010 07:21:31 (admin) local system accounts Administrator 14/07/2009 06:53:58 (admin) Guest never HomeGroupUser$ 17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning On None discovered Communications Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller primary Auto IP Address: 192.168.178.29 / 24 Gateway: 192.168.178.1 Dhcp Server: 192.168.178.1 Physical Address: 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: 192.168.178.1 Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy Unfortunately I don't see any specific mentioning ACPI hardware except the battery. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 17, 11:07*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 10:56:58 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: * * W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: * * *martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: * * * * 8.1m Windows Logon: * * mike Operating System * * * * * System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) * * * * * *TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a * * * * * * * *Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded * * * * * * * * Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY (NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives * * * * * * * Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy * * * * * * *1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB * *Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) * * * 79,92 GB * * * *67,18 GB free * *Network Drives * *None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) * * * * * Printers local user accounts * last logon *mike * * *17/08/2010 07:21:31 * * (admin) local system accounts *Administrator * * 14/07/2009 06:53:58 * * (admin) Guest * never *HomeGroupUser$ * *17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; * LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver * * * *on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers * * * * * *Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 * * * * * * * Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters * * * * * * * Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] * * * * * * new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 * * Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 * * Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning On * * * * * *None discovered Communications * * * * * * Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller *primary * Auto IP Address: * * * *192.168.178.29 / 24 * *Gateway: * * * *192.168.178.1 * *Dhcp Server: * *192.168.178.1 * *Physical Address: * * * 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: * * 192.168.178.1 * * * * * *Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy Unfortunately I don't see any specific mentioning ACPI hardware except the battery. I have just read this: http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/B...ht/false#M5279 will try an XP installation. |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 01:07:25 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 17, 11:07Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 10:56:58 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: Â* Â* W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: Â* Â* Â*martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: Â* Â* Â* Â* 8.1m Windows Logon: Â* Â* mike Operating System Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY (NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB Â* Â*Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) Â* Â* Â* 79,92 GB Â* Â* Â* Â*67,18 GB free Â* Â*Network Drives Â* Â*None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Printers local user accounts Â* last logon Â*mike Â* Â* Â*17/08/2010 07:21:31 Â* Â* (admin) local system accounts Â*Administrator Â* Â* 14/07/2009 06:53:58 Â* Â* (admin) Guest Â* never Â*HomeGroupUser$ Â* Â*17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; Â* LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver Â* Â* Â* Â*on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 Â* Â* Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 Â* Â* Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning On Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*None discovered Communications Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller Â*primary Â* Auto IP Address: Â* Â* Â* Â*192.168.178.29 / 24 Â* Â*Gateway: Â* Â* Â* Â*192.168.178.1 Â* Â*Dhcp Server: Â* Â*192.168.178.1 Â* Â*Physical Address: Â* Â* Â* 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: Â* Â* 192.168.178.1 Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy Unfortunately I don't see any specific mentioning ACPI hardware except the battery. I have just read this: http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/B...atellite-A205- S5800-freezes-when-AC-power-cord-is-connected/m-p/129846/highlight/ false#M5279 will try an XP installation. So it's a problem with Win 7 and Vista? It would then seem as though Toshiba has gotten away from proprietary ACPI drivers and its own control panel and moved to letting Windows ACPI do the job. This may be a bug in Vista / Win 7 ACPI when certain hardware is present and Windows provide the driver for the interface. Let us know what XP does for you. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 18, 3:45*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 01:07:25 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 17, 11:07*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 10:56:58 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: * * W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: * * *martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: * * * * 8.1m Windows Logon: * * mike Operating System * * * * * System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) * * * * * *TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a * * * * * * * *Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded * * * * * * * * Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY (NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy * * * * * * *1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB * *Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) * * * 79,92 GB * * * *67,18 GB free * *Network Drives * *None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) * * * * * Printers local user accounts * last logon *mike * * *17/08/2010 07:21:31 * * (admin) local system accounts *Administrator * * 14/07/2009 06:53:58 * * (admin) Guest * never *HomeGroupUser$ * *17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; * LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver * * * *on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers * * * * * *Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 * * * * * * * Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters * * * * * * * Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] * * * * * * new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 * * Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 * * Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning On * * * * * *None discovered Communications * * * * * * Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller *primary * Auto IP Address: * * * *192.168.178.29 / 24 * *Gateway: * * * *192.168.178.1 * *Dhcp Server: * *192.168.178.1 * *Physical Address: * * * 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: * * 192.168.178.1 * * * * * *Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host * * * * * *Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy Unfortunately I don't see any specific mentioning ACPI hardware except the battery. I have just read this: http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/B...atellite-A205- S5800-freezes-when-AC-power-cord-is-connected/m-p/129846/highlight/ false#M5279 will try an XP installation. So it's a problem with Win 7 and Vista? It would then seem as though Toshiba has gotten away from proprietary ACPI drivers and its own control panel and moved to letting Windows ACPI do the job. This may be a bug in Vista / Win 7 ACPI when certain hardware is present and Windows provide the driver for the interface. Let us know what XP does for you. I will have a try but needs time, anyway I'm skeptical as the pc do not boot at all, I don't know if there are any ACPI settings that are stored in the CMOS even if BIOS has no settings for them, but who knows? |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 09:12:38 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote:
On Aug 18, 3:45Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Wed, 18 Aug 2010 01:07:25 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: On Aug 17, 11:07Â*pm, Meat Plow wrote: On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 10:56:58 -0700, Mike De Petris wrote: what can we say from this: Computer Profile Summary Computer Name: Â* Â* W (in WORKGROUP) Profile Date: Â* Â* Â*martedì 17 agosto 2010 19:48:57 Advisor Version: Â* Â* Â* Â* 8.1m Windows Logon: Â* Â* mike Operating System Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* System Model Windows 7 Ultimate (build 7600) Install Language: English (United States) System Locale: Italian (Italy) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*TOSHIBA Satellite A205 PSAF0U-01Q009 System Serial Number: 37252508Q Enclosure Type: Other Processor a Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Main Circuit Board b 1,73 gigahertz Intel Core 2 Duo 64 kilobyte primary memory cache 2048 kilobyte secondary memory cache 64-bit ready Multi-core (2 total) Not hyper-threaded Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Board: Intel Corporation CAPELL VALLEY (NAPA) CRB BIOS: Phoenix Technologies LTD 5.20 10/25/2007 Drives Memory Modules c,d 79,92 Gigabytes Usable Hard Drive Capacity 67,18 Gigabytes Hard Drive Free Space ST980210AS [Hard drive] (80,03 GB) -- drive 0, s/n 5QY0S80G, rev 3.ALC, SMART Status: Healthy Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*1016 Megabytes Usable Installed Memory Slot 'M1' has 512 MB Slot 'M2' has 512 MB Â* Â*Local Drive Volumes c: (NTFS on drive 0) Â* Â* Â* 79,92 GB Â* Â* Â* Â*67,18 GB free Â* Â*Network Drives Â* Â*None detected Users (mouse over user name for details) Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Printers local user accounts Â* last logon Â*mike Â* Â* Â*17/08/2010 07:21:31 Â* Â* (admin) local system accounts Â*Administrator Â* Â* 14/07/2009 06:53:58 Â* Â* (admin) Guest Â* never Â*HomeGroupUser$ Â* Â*17/08/2010 19:05:41 DISABLED Marks a disabled account; Â* LOCKED OUT Marks a locked account Microsoft Shared Fax Driver Â* Â* Â* Â*on SHRFAX: Microsoft XPS Document Writer on XPSPort: Controllers Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Display ATA Channel 0 [Controller] ATA Channel 1 [Controller] Intel(R) 82801GBM/GHM (ICH7-M Family) Serial ATA Storage Controller - 27C4 Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Mobile Intel(R) 945 Express Chipset Family [Display adapter] (2x) Generic PnP Monitor (15,4"vis) Bus Adapters Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Multimedia Texas Instruments PCI-8x12/7x12/6x12 CardBus Controller Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C8 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27C9 Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CA Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB Universal Host Controller - 27CB Intel(R) 82801G (ICH7 Family) USB2 Enhanced Host Controller - 27CC High Definition Audio Device Virus Protection [Back to Top] Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* new Group Policies Microsoft Security Essentials Version 2.1.6805.0 Â* Â* Scan Engine Version 1.1.6004.0 Â* Â* Virus Definitions Version 1.87.1998.0 Realtime File Scanning Â* Â* On Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*None discovered Communications Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Other Devices Marvell Yukon 88E8039 PCI-E Fast Ethernet Controller Â*primary Â* Auto IP Address: Â* Â* Â* Â*192.168.178.29 / 24 Â* Â*Gateway: Â* Â* Â* Â*192.168.178.1 Â* Â*Dhcp Server: Â* Â*192.168.178.1 Â* Â*Physical Address: Â* Â* Â* 00:A0:D1:72:93:47 Microsoft ISATAP Adapter Teredo Tunneling Pseudo-Interface Networking Dns Server: Â* Â* 192.168.178.1 Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Texas Instruments 1394 OHCI Compliant Host Â* Â* Â* Â* Â* Â*Controller Microsoft AC Adapter Microsoft ACPI-Compliant Control Method Battery Microsoft Composite Battery HID-compliant consumer control device HID-compliant device USB Input Device (2x) HID Keyboard Device Standard PS/2 Keyboard SDA Standard Compliant SD Host Controller USB Composite Device USB Root Hub (5x) Generic volume shadow copy Unfortunately I don't see any specific mentioning ACPI hardware except the battery. I have just read this: http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/B...atellite-A205- S5800-freezes-when-AC-power-cord-is-connected/m-p/129846/highlight/ false#M5279 will try an XP installation. So it's a problem with Win 7 and Vista? It would then seem as though Toshiba has gotten away from proprietary ACPI drivers and its own control panel and moved to letting Windows ACPI do the job. This may be a bug in Vista / Win 7 ACPI when certain hardware is present and Windows provide the driver for the interface. Let us know what XP does for you. I will have a try but needs time, anyway I'm skeptical as the pc do not boot at all, I don't know if there are any ACPI settings that are stored in the CMOS even if BIOS has no settings for them, but who knows? Depends in the CMOS/BIOS. Some have very limited adjustments. Some might have ACPI settings. So the thing doesn't boot on AC power? That's not a software issue. That's a problem with onboard battery management. Or possible a slight corruption in the BIOS code. -- Live Fast, Die Young and Leave a Pretty Corpse |
motherboard cpu power section check
On Aug 18, 6:47*pm, Meat Plow wrote:
Depends in the CMOS/BIOS. Some have very limited adjustments. Some might have ACPI settings. So the thing doesn't boot on AC power? That's not a software issue. That's a problem with onboard battery management. Or possible a slight corruption in the BIOS code. yes it boots with battery only, as soon as I connect the AC cord it freezes, even in the BIOS, and if it is connected from the beginning LEDs light up, fan starts, display flashes a while but nothing more anyway, when I disable a CPU from device manager in safe mode, the pc worked well all the day, even shutting down and restarting, until I used a software tool to read ACPI temperatures, at that point it suddenly powered off and all was like before |
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