This laptop belongs to my cousins son who was crushed when it died on him. My aunt contacted me when Geek Squad gave them an estimate of over $1,100 to repair and asked if there was a way to get it fixed. Unfortunately there is nobody I could find here in central Illinois that does component level repairs like this. So on Monday (11-4-24) this laptop was sent FedEx to NorthridgeFix in California along with the reasonable expedite fee. On Thursday I was emailed conformation they received the laptop and repair had begun. This morning (11-8-24) I was greeted with an email that the repair was complete along with an invoice and easy to follow link to pay online. I cannot express how grateful I am that NorthridgeFix exists, does these repairs, and was professional and top notch to deal with. Thank you very much and keep making these great videos.
Hi Alex, I'm very impressed that you actually do take the time to read your fan's comments. It was me that made that comment about, "It looks something like this" in your previous video and I was pleasantly surprised you mentioned something about that at the beginning of this video and on some level, I felt validated as a human being at that moment. So thank you and keep up the awesome work. Really enjoy the content you put out.
I am sitting here with a smile on my face,, you actually read my comment about it looking something like this...I have heard that saying all my life and i always replied like i did to you.. i am 72 now,,, Keep up the good work i really enjoy your videos..
Oscilloscopes seem to be useful for repairing vintage computers where stuff is less integrated. If the processor clock is external, you can observe it. You can also observe all the individual address and data lines. I've seen a video where they found a signal for an address or data line that looked way off. But using an oscilloscope is not so much for newer computers, where the clock generation is on the same chip as the CPU, and most memory accesses are to the internal cache. You probably don't need to check address or data lines that go to RAM or peripherals on modern computers so much anymore.
Hi Alex, I've watched every ASUS laptop video you uploaded and it gave me hope that maybe my laptop can still be fixed. I have a liquid-damaged laptop that is not powering on, but the laptop is charging, and the charging indicator is on. There is no power indicator when I press the power button, but every time I try to power on the laptop with the charger and the battery unplugged, the mouse light turns on for maybe less than a second and then turns off. I've brought this to two repair shops, and they say the motherboard needs to be replaced. Do you think my laptop is still fixable? (I also noticed that the power is heating up or maybe somewhere that area) Thank you, and I hope you see this.
Components FAIL because of small defects in manufacturing. That's why components have a +/- rating for tolerance. A Components may function fine at first but after time they "Wear" electrically, and then all it takes is a change in power, current, voltage, that upset the component and it fails. I have seen components even short out due to SHOCK from hitting the item it's in, microscopic CRACKS and Fissures can form while a component is HOT from operation and a shock wave going though it can cause it to short out.
I don't think Geek squad is allowed to open laptops. Where are those components manufactured? What kind of quality control/ quality assurance is used? 🤔 Could a small heat sink or copper shim be used to help disipate heat from those MOSFETs?
UA-cam is not a support platform. Please use the "Contact Us" form to request an update or follow up on your ticket. northridgefix.com/contact-us/. Dolly is pretty quick with replies.
Please do a video explaining in details how to know which mosfect to replace a damaged one, things like the Moffett number and where to search for if there's no exact board and such🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Its not to difficult. and theres many videos of testing mosfets for failure. picture them like a lightswitch in your house. Mosfets have usually 3 main points. The source, the gate, and the drain. power comes in from the source, and out the drain. but they need power on the gate in order to allow electricity to connect from the source to the drain. so in the lightswitch analogy. power comes in from one side of the switch (source) and then out to the lightbulb from the (drain). And the actual switch that moves up and down is the (gate) Only difference is the mostfet uses power to flip the switch (gate). And the lightswitch uses your finger. The numbers you have to google to get a diagram of the mosfet to see what pin goes to what
@mystery504life yh thank you so much, but I don't think you got my question right. I'm asking about replacement how to find which mosfect to replace which of there's no exact donor board 🤔
@@adedokunoluwatobiloba1683 okay i think i understand. There are a few different websites that sell replacement mosfets and such. Mouser being one of them. Digikey is another. You can type in the numbers written on the mosfet your looking for, and they will sell you a replacement. But Mouser and Digikey are the most used parts suppliers
Everyday when someone says "Trying to find a time to do this & that" means they never are going to do it in their lifetime and this is usually always the case.
I hope I get to use the one I purchased eventually. It hasn't been on yet, though I'm just getting my feet wet. Great video thanks for sharing your knowledge.
Thanks Alex. I am pretty new and I did buy a scope . It’s a cool device but I was thinking I am doing it wrong since I found a multimeter was more useful :)
I don't know what's wrong with people's when they think oscilloscope was used in repairs, actually oscilloscope are mainly used for research purposes when you do reverse engineering in circuits or when you doing network engineering
They were used a lot many years ago for TV and radio repair. Back then, individual parts were replaced. Now, most TV repairs are done by replacing whole circuit boards because most shops don't have the experience Alex has, and it's much easier to replace the whole board. With TVs, most of the cost is the screen, so board replacement is economically feasible.
I have ASUS ROG STRIX 17 G733PY 2023 with AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX and RTX4090 It was twice in the repair already, they have been changing the motherboards. 2 weeks ago send again to repair. It has the same problem again and again. After some time when everything is fine you are powering laptop on and no image on display, but the laptop works. I can manipulate with the keyboard and do restarts. For example ten restarts in a row and display shows up again. :D Had to write a letter to change this laptop. Now waiting, it seems they are trying to fix again.
The capacitors are between the output of the MOSFET and ground to remove any A/C from the output and leave just DC power. When they short, they connect the output of the MOSFET to ground and cause the MOSFET to overheat.
copper, by which capacitor is connected with that mosfet (and on both ends), is a great heat conductor. and on such distances they might even heat up via air due to very close proximity.
I am thinking of using the oscilloscope for fault finding the keyboard with some dead keys. There is no reading on the keyboards cable so a multimeter is no use.
Alex, i'm an hobbist tinkerer since more than ten years, i seen so a lot of things, so i think i have the answer why they fail, and why also other faults happens, if you want my version, ask me.. bye..
Ok so you have no time to do a "thesis" on what caused the MOSFET to fail and it's true that a repair shop needs to be run efficient like you said: fix - invoice - next, etc. and I agree. It is not your job to do an in-depth post-mortem why what failed in which order. But then again, if you are so efficient, why did you waste your precious time to remove the two capacitors when it was already clear that the fault is at the MOSFET?
As he said in the video, the mosfet getting hot does not necessarily mean that is the faulty component. Most of the time it's a capacitor and it's faster to remove those so makes sense to check those first.
A shorted capacitor across the output of the MOSFET will cause the MOSFET to overheat. It's much faster to remove a capacitor than the MOSFET, so Alex removed the capacitors first. He said it was unusual for that particular MOSFET to fail, so he didn't jump to conclusions. When a MOSFET that usually falls overheats, he'll go right to removing the MOSFET.
Exactly my point when I said that the only people who think they need an oscilloscope are the same people who just think it looks cool on their bench or desk.
It depends on what you need to do. If you're designing a power supply or anything related to power electronics, then you need to check for the output waveform, the presence or magnitude of harmonics, etc. Also if you're designing a PI or PID closed loop system, then you need to check for undershoots, overshoots, etc. There are also additional examples where you would be using an oscilloscope. But for a repair shop like this, Alex almost never used it.
This laptop belongs to my cousins son who was crushed when it died on him. My aunt contacted me when Geek Squad gave them an estimate of over $1,100 to repair and asked if there was a way to get it fixed. Unfortunately there is nobody I could find here in central Illinois that does component level repairs like this. So on Monday (11-4-24) this laptop was sent FedEx to NorthridgeFix in California along with the reasonable expedite fee. On Thursday I was emailed conformation they received the laptop and repair had begun. This morning (11-8-24) I was greeted with an email that the repair was complete along with an invoice and easy to follow link to pay online.
I cannot express how grateful I am that NorthridgeFix exists, does these repairs, and was professional and top notch to deal with.
Thank you very much and keep making these great videos.
You're welcome. Great to hear from you.
👏
I read that as 'This laptop belongs to my cousins son who died when it crushed him' at first lol
@@ArranAsh I read the same to be fair. :D
Hi Alex, I'm very impressed that you actually do take the time to read your fan's comments. It was me that made that comment about, "It looks something like this" in your previous video and I was pleasantly surprised you mentioned something about that at the beginning of this video and on some level, I felt validated as a human being at that moment. So thank you and keep up the awesome work. Really enjoy the content you put out.
i can see you get so much joy from when the laptops turn on after ur fix with ur smile great job my man
Geek squad is like a clinic and Northridgefix is like the hospital. Turns out the patient needs surgery and now it's recovering better then factory.
Geek Squad is like a pair of chimps with those giant "WE'RE #1" foam fingers poking around the engine of a Ferrari and slinging feces everywhere.....
😂
more like a school infirmary vs a level 1 trauma center.
I am sitting here with a smile on my face,, you actually read my comment about it looking something like this...I have heard that saying all my life and i always replied like i did to you.. i am 72 now,,, Keep up the good work i really enjoy your videos..
i miss you saying "the laptop looks something like this" it is your unique signature
Oscilloscopes seem to be useful for repairing vintage computers where stuff is less integrated. If the processor clock is external, you can observe it. You can also observe all the individual address and data lines. I've seen a video where they found a signal for an address or data line that looked way off. But using an oscilloscope is not so much for newer computers, where the clock generation is on the same chip as the CPU, and most memory accesses are to the internal cache. You probably don't need to check address or data lines that go to RAM or peripherals on modern computers so much anymore.
Hi Alex,
I've watched every ASUS laptop video you uploaded and it gave me hope that maybe my laptop can still be fixed. I have a liquid-damaged laptop that is not powering on, but the laptop is charging, and the charging indicator is on. There is no power indicator when I press the power button, but every time I try to power on the laptop with the charger and the battery unplugged, the mouse light turns on for maybe less than a second and then turns off. I've brought this to two repair shops, and they say the motherboard needs to be replaced. Do you think my laptop is still fixable?
(I also noticed that the power is heating up or maybe somewhere that area)
Thank you, and I hope you see this.
did u figure it out?
Alex, why not place the camera in an overhead position. It will be much more convenient for you also.
Great fix again. Best part is the smile when its fixed- "We got it"
"We did an awesome job."
I watch your videos from Cameroon, i have your notifications turned on. It's 00:21 am here. Keep up!
Better than factory.
Every time I click on a Northridge Fix video I hope to hear that 😂👍
Components FAIL because of small defects in manufacturing. That's why components have a +/- rating for tolerance. A Components may function fine at first but after time they "Wear" electrically, and then all it takes is a change in power, current, voltage, that upset the component and it fails. I have seen components even short out due to SHOCK from hitting the item it's in, microscopic CRACKS and Fissures can form while a component is HOT from operation and a shock wave going though it can cause it to short out.
nice work as usual!
Come on man 🤭 something like this is ok. Even in romanian language we use to say it this way. Very grateful for your videos 🙏 keep up the good work 😁😌
I don't think Geek squad is allowed to open laptops. Where are those components manufactured? What kind of quality control/ quality assurance is used? 🤔 Could a small heat sink or copper shim be used to help disipate heat from those MOSFETs?
I really appreciate an update on my laptop HP Omen 15
UA-cam is not a support platform. Please use the "Contact Us" form to request an update or follow up on your ticket. northridgefix.com/contact-us/. Dolly is pretty quick with replies.
Sei il migliore amico,godo nel vedere i tuoi video.
Amazing 👏 🤩 💻👨🏾💻Fixed up
Just live the videos and makes me do more repairs my self 😊
This lad better than LR
Please do a video explaining in details how to know which mosfect to replace a damaged one, things like the Moffett number and where to search for if there's no exact board and such🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Its not to difficult. and theres many videos of testing mosfets for failure. picture them like a lightswitch in your house. Mosfets have usually 3 main points. The source, the gate, and the drain. power comes in from the source, and out the drain. but they need power on the gate in order to allow electricity to connect from the source to the drain.
so in the lightswitch analogy. power comes in from one side of the switch (source) and then out to the lightbulb from the (drain). And the actual switch that moves up and down is the (gate) Only difference is the mostfet uses power to flip the switch (gate). And the lightswitch uses your finger.
The numbers you have to google to get a diagram of the mosfet to see what pin goes to what
@mystery504life yh thank you so much, but I don't think you got my question right.
I'm asking about replacement how to find which mosfect to replace which of there's no exact donor board 🤔
@@adedokunoluwatobiloba1683 okay i think i understand. There are a few different websites that sell replacement mosfets and such. Mouser being one of them. Digikey is another. You can type in the numbers written on the mosfet your looking for, and they will sell you a replacement.
But Mouser and Digikey are the most used parts suppliers
Excellent work.
Amazing as always thank you so much for the shared knowledge 🙏
Everyday when someone says "Trying to find a time to do this & that" means they never are going to do it in their lifetime and this is usually always the case.
They fail because the quality is bad despite being very expensive. That's my thesis.
From india watched almost all your vedio
I love the work you do
Hope someday I get a chance to meet you
Great Video!
Can you tell me something about Lenovo BIOS Update gone wrong?
What can i do?
Laptop starts but no post nothing
Good work
I hope I get to use the one I purchased eventually. It hasn't been on yet, though I'm just getting my feet wet. Great video thanks for sharing your knowledge.
When does nf-oscilloscope go on sale?
Excelente
I'm from Brazil and I always watch your videos.. I love all your videos..😉👍
SUPER !!!
For my thesis I will determine why Big Boss removed the RAM stick.😉
Awesome ✌🏻✌🏻✌🏻
Does big boss re-apply thermal paste/pads (when applicable)before reassembly?
Of course. He Has to.
Nice one
That was fun.
If you want to find data lines for the screen you will use the schope
Alex, your microscope has hydraulics 😂😂😂
can we see your multimeter on the screen plz
How do manufacturers solve the distribution of bad parts evenly across all notebooks?
Fill in the blank "_____________ looks something like this"
Some habits take time to change 😂
Have a peaceful weekend Alex, Pops, Big Boss and Dolly.
Love❤U Boss
Thanks Alex. I am pretty new and I did buy a scope . It’s a cool device but I was thinking I am doing it wrong since I found a multimeter was more useful :)
Love the genuine smile when he sees that it is fixed..."Yes...yes".
Always love your videos and watch until I hear your little girl say "better than factory".
I don't know what's wrong with people's when they think oscilloscope was used in repairs, actually oscilloscope are mainly used for research purposes when you do reverse engineering in circuits or when you doing network engineering
They were used a lot many years ago for TV and radio repair. Back then, individual parts were replaced. Now, most TV repairs are done by replacing whole circuit boards because most shops don't have the experience Alex has, and it's much easier to replace the whole board. With TVs, most of the cost is the screen, so board replacement is economically feasible.
If you have time to read this, go put some screws in the wall for the microscope stand. {Friendly reminder}
nice
I have ASUS ROG STRIX 17 G733PY 2023 with AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX and RTX4090
It was twice in the repair already, they have been changing the motherboards.
2 weeks ago send again to repair. It has the same problem again and again. After some time when everything is fine you are powering laptop on and no image on display, but the laptop works. I can manipulate with the keyboard and do restarts. For example ten restarts in a row and display shows up again. :D
Had to write a letter to change this laptop. Now waiting, it seems they are trying to fix again.
Technically how can the MOSFET heat up if the short is on one of the nearby capacitors?
The capacitors are between the output of the MOSFET and ground to remove any A/C from the output and leave just DC power. When they short, they connect the output of the MOSFET to ground and cause the MOSFET to overheat.
copper, by which capacitor is connected with that mosfet (and on both ends), is a great heat conductor.
and on such distances they might even heat up via air due to very close proximity.
yep, the infrared camera shows clearly the mosfet as a problem.,
👍👍
Shortest distance between two points .........is a short!
Geek Squad gives true Geeks a bad name!
We found the bad guy!!! =D
0:25 Ahahaha! You said it again. 😂
Nice work everyone
Love from Pakistan
Bitloker Bypass Video please
I call Geeksquad "parts changers". They don't do what we do. They can't repair at the component level.
are asus laptops just bad, or are they just used by many?
Watching this while working on a ps5 controller. I’m putting in a new ps5 controller stick (stick drift fix)
Instead of an oscilloscope you should put a big hammer on your desk and count how many ask what you use it for and if it's for sale :o)
Can you hire me please???
Do you sell Oscillo scopes? LOL
Heat sink must fit on cpu and gpu.
i have say it only one time x)
❤asus rog top❤
Asus primary better than factory CEO
I am thinking of using the oscilloscope for fault finding the keyboard with some dead keys. There is no reading on the keyboards cable so a multimeter is no use.
Most likely iPhones need to test pulses on some motherboard's troubleshooting and maybe some graphic cards, that's all.
Alex, i'm an hobbist tinkerer since more than ten years, i seen so a lot of things, so i think i have the answer why they fail, and why also other faults happens, if you want my version, ask me.. bye..
the board wanna play games lol !!!
Ok so you have no time to do a "thesis" on what caused the MOSFET to fail and it's true that a repair shop needs to be run efficient like you said: fix - invoice - next, etc. and I agree.
It is not your job to do an in-depth post-mortem why what failed in which order.
But then again, if you are so efficient, why did you waste your precious time to remove the two capacitors when it was already clear that the fault is at the MOSFET?
As he said in the video, the mosfet getting hot does not necessarily mean that is the faulty component. Most of the time it's a capacitor and it's faster to remove those so makes sense to check those first.
A shorted capacitor across the output of the MOSFET will cause the MOSFET to overheat. It's much faster to remove a capacitor than the MOSFET, so Alex removed the capacitors first. He said it was unusual for that particular MOSFET to fail, so he didn't jump to conclusions. When a MOSFET that usually falls overheats, he'll go right to removing the MOSFET.
Alex
Nf attachment
ACKSHUALLY things usually look like the way they look, so... 🤓
i dont know how to feel about trying to power laptop without heatsink lol
BestBuy no skill to repair just swap motherboard,technical support manager doesn't have a technical background to lead a team.
hahahahahhaha very funny comments at the start :D
9:10
📿
nobody fixing these things as fast as you , and you don't use an oscilloscope
Exactly my point when I said that the only people who think they need an oscilloscope are the same people who just think it looks cool on their bench or desk.
It depends on what you need to do. If you're designing a power supply or anything related to power electronics, then you need to check for the output waveform, the presence or magnitude of harmonics, etc.
Also if you're designing a PI or PID closed loop system, then you need to check for undershoots, overshoots, etc.
There are also additional examples where you would be using an oscilloscope.
But for a repair shop like this, Alex almost never used it.