T41 Dead(ish)
T41 Dead(ish)
I'm trying to fix a T41 for a good friend who can't really afford a replacement laptop at the moment.
I've read lots of threads here, but I haven't come accross anyone that seems to have exactly my problem or any potential solutions without motherboard replacement being mentioned.
When I plug in the power cord, there is no sound (beeps?) at all which is not a good sign I believe?
Upon pressing the power button, the battery symbol on the LCD stays solidly on, as does the Z in a circle, and also the other 2 lights (num lock & caps lock?) appear for a second then go off.
The fans start but nothing happens on the LCD (or an external monitor) and the hard drive light never comes on and thats it!
I've now tried taking out the DVD drive, battery, hard drive, all RAM, reseated the keyboard connector and tried using a different PSU & keyboard to no avail (also still no sound whatsoever from the laptop)
Also tried pressing the GPU before powering up which doesn't do anything.
It may be worth clearing the CMOS and/or changing the battery "just in case" I suppose?
Any other things I can try please????????????
I've read lots of threads here, but I haven't come accross anyone that seems to have exactly my problem or any potential solutions without motherboard replacement being mentioned.
When I plug in the power cord, there is no sound (beeps?) at all which is not a good sign I believe?
Upon pressing the power button, the battery symbol on the LCD stays solidly on, as does the Z in a circle, and also the other 2 lights (num lock & caps lock?) appear for a second then go off.
The fans start but nothing happens on the LCD (or an external monitor) and the hard drive light never comes on and thats it!
I've now tried taking out the DVD drive, battery, hard drive, all RAM, reseated the keyboard connector and tried using a different PSU & keyboard to no avail (also still no sound whatsoever from the laptop)
Also tried pressing the GPU before powering up which doesn't do anything.
It may be worth clearing the CMOS and/or changing the battery "just in case" I suppose?
Any other things I can try please????????????
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rkawakami
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Welcome to thinkpads.com!
The lack of any sound when the AC adapter is plugged in might mean that the BIOS has been told not to issue the "Power Control Beep". This option is available under the Config/Alarm section. Note however, that the speakers may simply be muted (press the volume up button a couple of times and see if you get any sounds). Of course, if you can't see anything on the LCD or external monitor then how can you navigate to the proper BIOS menu??? If you want to try to toggle this setting blindly, then:
- press the power button to start up the system
- within 5 seconds, press and hold the F1 key for at least two seconds
- press the ENTER key once
- press the DOWN arrow key 10 times, then press ENTER
- press the ENTER key, then the DOWN arrow key, then the ENTER key once more
- press the ESC key TWICE
- press the F10 key, then the ENTER key
This entire procedure will toggle the power control alarm setting. If it was disabled, then this should enable it. If you then get beeps when you attach and remove the AC adapter, then at least you have proven that the BIOS is working.
I'm assuming you have either attached the external monitor and have it powered up prior to booting the T41 or you have tried pressing the Fn+F7 key combinations a couple of times, once the system has been running for several seconds. If so, then the lack of video in both the LCD and external monitor probably means a motherboard issue (sorry
). If only the LCD was not working but external video was fine, then that might point to a bad inverter, CCFL (the backlight inside the panel), a bad ribbon cable or a stuck lid switch.
The lack of any sound when the AC adapter is plugged in might mean that the BIOS has been told not to issue the "Power Control Beep". This option is available under the Config/Alarm section. Note however, that the speakers may simply be muted (press the volume up button a couple of times and see if you get any sounds). Of course, if you can't see anything on the LCD or external monitor then how can you navigate to the proper BIOS menu??? If you want to try to toggle this setting blindly, then:
- press the power button to start up the system
- within 5 seconds, press and hold the F1 key for at least two seconds
- press the ENTER key once
- press the DOWN arrow key 10 times, then press ENTER
- press the ENTER key, then the DOWN arrow key, then the ENTER key once more
- press the ESC key TWICE
- press the F10 key, then the ENTER key
This entire procedure will toggle the power control alarm setting. If it was disabled, then this should enable it. If you then get beeps when you attach and remove the AC adapter, then at least you have proven that the BIOS is working.
I'm assuming you have either attached the external monitor and have it powered up prior to booting the T41 or you have tried pressing the Fn+F7 key combinations a couple of times, once the system has been running for several seconds. If so, then the lack of video in both the LCD and external monitor probably means a motherboard issue (sorry
Ray Kawakami
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
Thanks for the reply.
I have now replaced the CMOS battery with a new one which didn't help at all!
I've also tried changing the LCD with one from another working laptop to try and prove a point but still nothing at all appears on the display (apart from the same LEDs on the front of the panel)
I've also unplugged and reseated as many connectors as I can find on the motherboard plus tried a totally different stick of RAM on the internal slot to no avail.
I just find it very hard to believe that there is clearly power getting to the laptop & screen, yet there is no sign of anything appearing whatsoever, not even random colours or distortions!!
If it could just POST, I'd be happier.
I'm presuming that it WOULD POST if it was able to with no hard drive, DVD-Rom, Battery?
I have now replaced the CMOS battery with a new one which didn't help at all!
I've also tried changing the LCD with one from another working laptop to try and prove a point but still nothing at all appears on the display (apart from the same LEDs on the front of the panel)
I've also unplugged and reseated as many connectors as I can find on the motherboard plus tried a totally different stick of RAM on the internal slot to no avail.
I just find it very hard to believe that there is clearly power getting to the laptop & screen, yet there is no sign of anything appearing whatsoever, not even random colours or distortions!!
If it could just POST, I'd be happier.
I'm presuming that it WOULD POST if it was able to with no hard drive, DVD-Rom, Battery?
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ajkula66
- SuperUserGeorge

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Your assumption that it should post without the missing parts is the correct one.
This sounds like a classic case of a GPU failure that T4x/R5x units with ATi video are known for.
Permanent fix would involve solder re-balling/re-flowing in the GPU area or a motherboard replacement.
Less permanent fix may be a couple of "post-it" squares on the top of the GPU.
Good luck.
This sounds like a classic case of a GPU failure that T4x/R5x units with ATi video are known for.
Permanent fix would involve solder re-balling/re-flowing in the GPU area or a motherboard replacement.
Less permanent fix may be a couple of "post-it" squares on the top of the GPU.
Good luck.
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Cheers,
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Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
AARP club members:A31p, T43pSF
Abused daily: R61
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
I've tried many times to power up with lots of pressure to the ATI graphics chip with no effect at all.
1) Could the ATI chip simply be totally dead or is that unlikely?
2) Would the laptop POST or show any signs of life on the display in theory if there was no RAM present (bearing in mind that I'm getting no beeps etc from the machine at all) ??
3) Could the CPU be totally dead in my situation (described earlier) ?
4) There are 2 other big chips around the ATI branded chip...what are these? (one says Intel on it and the other is a small silver square on a large chip)
1) Could the ATI chip simply be totally dead or is that unlikely?
2) Would the laptop POST or show any signs of life on the display in theory if there was no RAM present (bearing in mind that I'm getting no beeps etc from the machine at all) ??
3) Could the CPU be totally dead in my situation (described earlier) ?
4) There are 2 other big chips around the ATI branded chip...what are these? (one says Intel on it and the other is a small silver square on a large chip)
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underclocker
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I've come across several machines with GPU issue (similar sounding to your issue) and some did need somewhat extreme pressure directly on the GPU to boot. Basically, without the palmrest installed, I lifted the keyboard and let it rest on the back of my hand while I applied very firm pressure directly to the GPU with my fingers and turned on the machine with my other hand. I'm not sure if you tried this, but it worked for me on those machines that wouldn't boot with pressure on the keyboard.
Last edited by underclocker on Wed Aug 06, 2008 5:33 am, edited 1 time in total.
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fasterbybike
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If the connection is faulty, then the symptoms are the same as the chip being dead.hotlips69 wrote: 1) Could the ATI chip simply be totally dead or is that unlikely?
Yes, you should get beeps if there is no RAM present. Otherwise it will not complete the POST process and nothing will be displayed.2) Would the laptop POST or show any signs of life on the display in theory if there was no RAM present (bearing in mind that I'm getting no beeps etc from the machine at all) ??
Unlikely. If you're getting any activity then, no it will not be dead. Rule out all other problems first. You should be able to pick up an el cheapo Banias cpu if you think that this is a problem area.3) Could the CPU be totally dead in my situation (described earlier) ?
Northbridgeand Southbridge.4) There are 2 other big chips around the ATI branded chip...what are these? (one says Intel on it and the other is a small silver square on a large chip)
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I thought of trying something like that, but didn't fancy putting my hand anywhere near the live motherboard for obvious reasons!!underclocker wrote:I've come across several machines with GPU issue (similar sounding to your issue) and some did need somewhat extreme pressure directly on the GPU to boot. Basically, without the palmrest installed, I lifted the keyboard and let it rest on the back of my hand while I applied very firm pressure directly to the GPU with my fingers and turned on the machine with my other hand. I'm not sure if you tried this, but it worked for me on those machines that wouldn't boot with pressure on the keyboard.
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rkawakami
- Admin

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There will not be any harmful voltages down on the motherboard; the inverter for the LCD panel is the only place where you need to be careful and you will be nowhere near that. Just make sure that if you are wearing any rings, you keep them away from the components, lest you short something out and do (more) damage to the motherboard. The only other issue would be heat generated from some of the parts, but for a 30 second boot test, that isn't enough time for anything to get so hot that it would burn you (except for the CPU and it's covered by the heatsink/fan).
Ray Kawakami
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
Before you head down the risky GPU reflow route, take off all devices and power (adapter, battery, CMOS) and do the power-drain routine: press power button 10 times or more then hold down for 20 seconds. Reconnect only the adapter and try to power on. No luck? You've already tried the obvious possible issue with RAM so yes, it might be the GPU. Did you try taking off the internal network/modem card?
Best of luck! Cheers
Best of luck! Cheers
Hi, able to insert pressure on the keyboard and my T40 able to boot up with display, but it turn blank after a while and have to repeat the pressing on the keyboard.underclocker wrote:I've come across several machines with GPU issue (similar sounding to your issue) and some did need somewhat extreme pressure directly on the GPU to boot. Basically, without the palmrest installed, I lifted the keyboard and let it rest on the back of my hand while I applied very firm pressure directly to the GPU with my fingers and turned on the machine with my other hand. I'm not sure if you tried this, but it worked for me on those machines that wouldn't boot with pressure on the keyboard.
Do you have any solution to slove the problem withour having to press on the keyboard constantly..Thanks in advance!
I would replace the mobo.
Failing that there is a user here who can re-solder it for you.
I have heard of people folding up business cards and using that as a shim to place pressure on the GPU. I don't suggest this as it screams 'redneck hack' and is doomed to failure as well.
This machine is ultimately going to die unless you repair the GPU or replace it with a known good unit.
Failing that there is a user here who can re-solder it for you.
I have heard of people folding up business cards and using that as a shim to place pressure on the GPU. I don't suggest this as it screams 'redneck hack' and is doomed to failure as well.
This machine is ultimately going to die unless you repair the GPU or replace it with a known good unit.
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