A surprise and mysterious X61s survival from keyboard spill
Posted: Sun Jul 12, 2009 5:36 pm
It is a X61s. My wife spilled some water on the right lower side of the keyboard and she kept using the laptop for several hours. Then the next morning, when we opened it, it said "invalid remote change requested" on a dark screen and halted there. Tried it several times and then it is no display at all except some bee sound.
I disconnected battery and power, took out the keyboard, and used a hair dryer to blow the affected area with cool air. But no luck.
Then I started to give up on saving the laptop and think about saving the hard drive. I went to best buy to buy a closure for the HD. The technical staff said that in most cases, if you can not turn on the computer after spill, it is almost certain that the main board is dead and you should look for a new system. But he did hint about entering BIOS setup and see if I can do it and observe anything.
So I came back and did it. I did not see anything (I am not an expert on hardware). I did restore it to the default BIOS settings. I also hit ThinkVantage and enter the safe mode. Nothing did I change. I then restart and was thrilled to see that the system was starting up the Windows Vista, although it showed the startup menu, saying it was not normally shut down last time. To be safe, I selected the safe mode. Vista was started in safe mode without anyting strange. Then restart with normal mode, looking good.
Anything insight on what could have happened? Should I relax now?
I disconnected battery and power, took out the keyboard, and used a hair dryer to blow the affected area with cool air. But no luck.
Then I started to give up on saving the laptop and think about saving the hard drive. I went to best buy to buy a closure for the HD. The technical staff said that in most cases, if you can not turn on the computer after spill, it is almost certain that the main board is dead and you should look for a new system. But he did hint about entering BIOS setup and see if I can do it and observe anything.
So I came back and did it. I did not see anything (I am not an expert on hardware). I did restore it to the default BIOS settings. I also hit ThinkVantage and enter the safe mode. Nothing did I change. I then restart and was thrilled to see that the system was starting up the Windows Vista, although it showed the startup menu, saying it was not normally shut down last time. To be safe, I selected the safe mode. Vista was started in safe mode without anyting strange. Then restart with normal mode, looking good.
Anything insight on what could have happened? Should I relax now?