Quoting myself....
rkawakami wrote:My boss was out of town on a business trip yesterday (Friday) so I'll see what he says about any schematics when he gets back.
Alas, no luck on the search for IBM documents about the power circuits here at work. I've been looking around the net for problems reported about IBM laptops not powering on.
Getting a little off topic for a second:
The power on problem seems to be related to when the laptop enters hibernation mode and refuses to revive. Most of the "solutions" revolve around putting the laptop inside the refrigerator/freezer in the hopes that it will bleed off the charge from the capacitor(s).
Note: I do NOT recommend doing this! The story about the overcharged capacitors seems to originate from around 2001 by an IBM tech who told this to a person who had a power problem:
http://www.windowsitpro.com/Articles/Ar ... 19920.html
(found by Yahoo using "overcharged capacitor ibm thinkpad" search string)
Unfortunately, the bulk of the article can only be read if you subscribe to the site. However reading the comments that have been posted at that site I get the feeling that this is may also the origin of the "multiple press and then hold power button" fix.
I also can't help but believe that this article somehow reinforced the capacitor issue:
http://www.geek.com/news/geeknews/2003F ... 018535.htm
Several years back there was a known problem from some Taiwanese (I believe) capacitor manufacturers that had a high
infant mortality rate. Although this is probably not what is causing problems in three and four year old laptops, there may be a preceived connection between bad capacitors and power problems.
And bringing it back on-topic:
Most of what I've found talked about the "overcharged capacitor" issue and not anything about dead CMOS batteries preventing power-on. I still have not run across any information about a depleted CMOS battery proven to be the cause of a failure for an IBM laptop to turn on.