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You are here: Home / Archives for Helpful Tips

Can your local laptop or computer shop fix that?

April 13, 2011 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

As a computer repair shop we see a number of damaged computer-related electronics pass through our door daily, but we also see a number of strictly electronic items from time to time. For example we had a gentleman in our local town bring us a solar panel that had a damaged crystal oscillator, if you need an explanation this will help here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_oscillator, that we tested, changed, and repaired his unit.

To the point, we are not just an average break fix computer company. We are not just a degree holding computer repair facility. We are not just a reflow and reballing facility. We are an electronics company.

We fix TVs. We fix amplifiers. We fix stereos. We fix laptops. We fix desktops. We fix TCUs. We fix printers. We fix battery chargers. We fix about anything that can be soldered or tested with a scope, multimeter, or continuity tester.

We use only Hakko-branded equipment for our fine pitch soldering. We have all Fluke-branded electrical test equipment.

Below is an example of a system that was sent to a Florida-based repair facility off of eBay who could not fix the unit. Their solution was to replace the motherboard. For all their soldering knowledge, testing equipment, and time they only could suggest a motherboard replacement.

In the picture above the mosFET, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosfet, was damaged due to a short overloading one of the gates. This simple solder work can only be performed by hand, with the right equipment, and with the correct knowledge.

After the pick and place parts repair was performed we had a fully working and functional machine for our client in less than 24 hours.

Now can your computer shop do this for you? If not, then we are willing to offer you a deal to try our service out in the state of Georgia.

Write me at one of the contacts below and I will make sure to make it worth your time:

Website: http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/
Twitter: http://twitter.com/james_c_howell
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/james-howell/29/221/696
Google: http://www.google.com/search?q=doubleclickittofixit.com
Email: http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/contact/email-address/

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: amd, broken laptop, burned, damaged motherboard, dv2000, dv6000, dv9000, hot, ic, mosfet

UPDATE: ANOTHER eBAY SELLER WITH A COPPER SHIM REPAIR FAILURE!!!!!

December 19, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

I have stated time and time again to my users why I do not use copper shims. This is a prime, grade A example of what can, will, and does happen with copper shims.

This laptop came in from an owner whom brought their laptop to me from Dalton, Georgia. A copper shim was placed on his system from a laptop repair center from the United States that he used off of eBay. I am not naming names of the offending company, but I will post the pictures.

DO NOT USE COPPER SHIMS! As the pictures display, this copper shim damaged the system. In previous examples the system displayed a damaged and cracked chipset. This system displayed a overloaded capacitor issue. This happens when the power coming in the system is modified due to the chipset not failing due to the copper shim. In short, the copper shim does not let the chipset overhead or fail then the power just amps up and causes a system failure.

This failure occured within the MosFET area labeled AO4407 and a three capacitor cluster. This failure is unrepairable due to the planing within the layers in the motherboard.

If you need your laptop fixed, check this link: http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/pricing/laptop-bga-reflow/

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: artic silver 5, BGA, chipset, chipsets, copper shim, Dalton, dv6000, DV6500, GeForce, go6150, NF-G6150-N-A2, NF-GO6150-N-A2, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair, turion x64

If copper shims do not work, then if I do a fan modification will that help keep my GPU cooler?

November 3, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

I get this question along with “Do you do fan modifications?” and “How do you do fan modifications?”

Here is a little tip, this concept is not a new one since I have written about how other online sellers including Precision Division out of Florida otherwise known as ibuiltonline perform his modification some 8 months ago when I first registered my website and placed the website online. You can see a video of them checking a system for the voltage on the board, but guess what voltage does not equal heat. Second the concept does more damage to your system than any good. Copper shims are the rave since it does so much for your system, but users fail to realize the risk that the modification does long term. The same is true with the fan modification.

First lets describe how the fan modification works and how it is performed. No need in getting excited, but yes I am selling you a trade secret for nada. Your fan comes with four wires. As I look at one I see a yellow, black, white, and red wire that plugs in by a Molex connector to the motherboard. If you diagram the wire schematic, you will see that the white and red wire both provide a voltage line out from the motherboard to the fan. By trimming the white wire, you have placed a direct untapped 12v line to the fan causing it to run a full RPMs. So the trick here is to run your fan at full speed, expel heat, and have a running system for how long, perhaps 120 days?

In my opinion, I see from a engineering stand point that this may be genius, but the catch. The fans are poor HEAT displacing devices in the first place. The fans are created, modeled, and recycled from Pentium M systems. The fans do not have the heat displacing capability in any capacity for a Dual Core system. What you see is not a modern marvel of engineering inside your system, but a modern marvel of accounting. Someone somewhere said that a redesign of an existing fan was cheaper than building a new one.

Then what about the modification? If you mod the fan to run a full RPMS, then how long will it last? Tell me, how old is your system? Maybe 2 or 3 years old. Then what you have is a used fan with stressed bearings, dried bearings, broken blades, maybe a stressed motor. I see modding the fan to run stronger and harder to be a unwise choice. This will help to push the system into a failure. When your fan fails then your chipset will overheat in perhaps two to three minutes. The pictures you have seen of heat guns doing damage, yeah the chipset can do the same to itself. Then in the end you will at least need a reflow, a fan, and a laptop cooler. In the extreme, you will need a CPU because they do pop like the GPU chipsets, a fan, a motherboard, and a laptop cooler. All because you wanted to get your system repaired, and you were handed a fan modified system.

I see a better alternative is this. Change your user habits, and use an external fan. I personally have three Dell D820s and D830s that I have reflowed. I reflow them myself, and have had to perform this task about 5 times due to wireless issues, but no video issues yet. I leave my systems running for hours at a time, but I own and run a reflow shop and computer shop so I have countless resources at my disposal. As a common user, you will not have that luxury.

I suggest the following to all my clients and everyone that calls me including my mother:

1: Turn your computer off when you are not using it. If you do not, think of all the power the system uses, all the other parts failing like the inverter and battery, and the heat buildup. When your laptop overheats and dries the thermal compound, the thermal compound starts to act as a insulator, ie. heat builder, than a transfer, ie. heat displacer.

2: Get a laptop cooler. I use Zalman coolers that are three fanned systems and my systems do not have issues. If you get a cheap cooler, then you get a cheap heat displacer.

3: Update your drivers. I see Nvidia.com places updated drivers about every 30 to 90 days on certain products. If you only check the HP.com website you will never find these drivers.

4: Ask questions. If you ask questions and get educated you can decide better. I find nothing wrong with one question or 100 questions. When you ask a business a few questions and that business has no time for you to answer them, then you cannot make an informed decision. I do not mind if you email me, call me, or even walk up to me to ask a question.

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: dv2000, dv6000, dv9000, fan modification, ibuiltonline, overheating, reflow, tx1000

This does not equal that.

October 8, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

I have found out over the past few weeks that local repair shops have been selling users one thing and delivering yet another.

I have seen this as a policy held by such shops as Leaping Liz’s, which seems to be a premium quality repair facility located in Dalton, GA, and The Computer Guys.

THIS PICTURE ABOVE DOES NOT MEAN YOU HAVE RECEIVED RAM. I am seeing too many users bringing me systems and calling me out to check systems that run slow after being worked on and upgraded that have never been upgraded. If you have a system that you have taken elsewhere and received a receipt saying you received RAM upgrades and were billed $50.00 for virtual memory you have paid for nothing.

Keep in mind virtual memory is not physical RAM or memory. If you are billed for a memory upgrade and get virtual memory that is, in my opinion, border line theft. To better explain it, virtual memory is not RAM but your operating system’s page file that copies running information from the physical memory to the hard drive and vice versa as programs are maximized and minimized and are clicked on or ran.

I have personally worked on a system last week that a user brought to me that was custom built by Morrison’s Computers that he had taken to Leaping Liz’s for a virus repair. The receipt stated he had been upgraded with 1.5GB of RAM. Upon opening his system up his desktop had the memory from Morrison’s original build in it, but his VIRTUAL MEMORY stated 1524MB of virtual memory. He had paid $50.00 for that upgrade.

As a consumer you have the right to a second opinion. If you have questions feel free to call me or email me. Both are free. I can be reached at 706-307-9689 or emailed here

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: DV6500, mosfet, NF-G6150-N-A2, wikipedia

Update: THIS IS WHY YOU DO NOT USE COPPER SHIMS!!!!!!!

October 7, 2010 by DoubleClickItToFixIt.com

I have stated time and time again to my users why I do not use copper shims. This is a prime, grade A example of what can, will, and does happen with shims.

This laptop came in from an owner whom sent their laptop from Australia. This copper shim was placed on his system from a laptop repair center from the United States that he used off of eBay. I am not naming names of the offending company, but I will post the pictures.

DO NOT USE COPPER SHIMS! As the pictures display, this copper shim chipped the video chipset.

If you need your laptop fixed, check this link: http://applelogicboardrepairservice.com/pricing/laptop-bga-reflow/

Filed Under: Helpful Tips Tagged With: amd, artic silver 5, BGA, chipset, chipsets, copper shim, copper shims, GeForce, go6150, NF-430-N-A3, nvidia, overheating, reflow, repair, turion x64, tx1000

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A list of our blog entries…

Apple MacBook 820-2915-B A1286 15 inch Laptop With Red Lines Video Repair Service North Of Atlanta

Apple MacBook UniBody No Video Repair On 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 Systems With Testing and Repair

Apple Laptop Testing Tip: A simple way to test without an external

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Designer, Developer, and Co-Owner of DoubleClickItToFixIt.com in Chattanooga, TN. Follow me on LinkedIn or Instagram.

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