The battery was very low, possibly discharged, on starting up today.
Windows XP started up to the login message, and the message 'You should
change your battery or switch to outlet power...' appeared, even though the
mains was connected.
Instead of carrying on and logging in, I turned off the mains power at the
wall, and the laptop just died. Now it will not restart - the system
self-test splash doesn't appear, and there are a couple of attempts to
access the hard drive, but nothing else.
Ironically it appears the battery is now recharging, and it makes no
difference how the machine is restarted, ie with or without mains power, or
even with the battery out of the machine.
It seems to me the machine may be in some sort of 'locked' mode - have had a
look at the manual and the Toshiba web forums, but cannot find anything
relevant. I suppose the hard drive might have failed (hell of a
coincidence), but in that case I would have thought the boot message should
still appear - if I take out the DIMMS and start up, things are exactly the
same - no video whatsoever.
Any ideas at all would be very welcome - TIA!
Vaughan
Sounds very much like a dead power brick, though. Your battery has gone
totally flat, as it's not being charged for some reason.
--
Tciao for Now!
John.
>
> Sounds very much like a dead power brick, though. Your battery has gone
> totally flat, as it's not being charged for some reason.
>
It could be intermittent. OP said that the system died when he turned
off the power supply, that means that the supply was working at that time.
If it's an intermittent problem I would suspect the power socket in the
laptop rather than the power brick. I had one machine that would only
charge if the power plug was being pushed in. Changing the power brick
didn't change that.
If it is the power socket it may be due to a cracked track on the PCB.
Fixing that needs disassembly. It's possibly a relatively simple repair
if you have the right tools but could be completely impossible without
them.
Hi guys
Thanks for the responses - update: there is apparently nothing wrong with
the charging circuitry - the battery has fully recharged.
I'm beginning to think it is CPU/mainboard related, since no combination of
DIMMs/slots makes any difference, and doubt if both have gone faulty.
Regards
Vaughan