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VBL3X Service manual for WIN8
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1. PXE BOOT capability lt Legacy gt Fl Help N Select Item F5 F6 Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit lt Select Menu Enter Select E SubMenu F10 Save and Exit For EFI boot priority order section it will show EFI boot device if the unit equip EFI device If load default setting EFI Boot priority order will recovery to the setting of entering setup menu The following message is prompted when user change the boot type The Boot page will be changed after reboot The boot device will be changed after system reboot OK Help information Use lt T gt or lt gt to select a device then press lt F5 gt to move it down the list or lt F6 gt to Move it up the list Press lt Esc gt to escape the menu 10 4 Exit Menu InsydeH20 Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Boot Exit Exit Saving Changes Exit Discarding Changes Load Optimal Defaults Details see the following Help Information F1 N Select F5 F6 Change F9 Setup Help Item Values Defaults Esc lt gt Select Enter Select F10 Save and Exit Screen SubMenu Exit Exit Saving Changes Allows the user to save changes to NV Storage and reboot system The following message is prompted when user press Enter on the item 23 Exit Saving Changes Yes No Yes Save Changes Exit SETUP and reboot No
2. s If an error is detected by the display test perform the Display Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 3 s If an error is detected by the keyboard test perform the Keyboard s Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 4 s If an error is detected when using an external USB device perform the External s USB Devices s Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 5 s If an error is detected when using the CRT connection perform the CRT Failure Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 6 s If an error is detected when using the HDMI connection perform the HDMI Failure Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 7 s If an error is detected when using the touch pad perform the Touch Pad Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 8 s If an error is detected when using the speakers perform the Speaker Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 9 s If an error is detected when using the CD DVD drive perform the CD ROM DVD Drive Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 10 s If an error is detected when using the Wireless LAN unit perform the Wireless LAN Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 11 s If an error is detected when using the Camera perform the Camera Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 12 s If an error is detected when using the Bluetooth perform the Bluetooth Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 13 3 Chapter 6 2 Power Supply Troubleshooting START Check Power Supply Status Procedure 1 n A
3. 4 1 SCOPE This specification describes the physical functional and electrical characteristics of the 65 watts single output 19V 3 42A switching power supply It would be conformed to ENERGY STARR standard 4 2 INPUT CHARACTERISTICS 4 2 1 Input Voltage Input voltage range 90 264Vrms 4 2 2 Input Frequency Input frequency range 47 63 Hz 4 2 3 Input current Input current should be lower than 1 6 0 85Arms under full load and 100 240Vrms input voltage conditions 4 2 4 Inrush Current Inrush current should be less than 220A and no damage under full load and cold at 25 C 240Vrms input voltage 4 2 5 Leakage Current The total combined leakage current shall not exceed 100 microamperes when tested at 240 Vrms 50 Hz and not exceed 50 microamperes when tested at 100Vrms 60Hz in anormal operating condition 4 2 6 Power Consumption Input power saving should be lower than 0 5 Watts under No load at 115 230 Vrms input voltage conditions It would be conformed to ENERGY STARS standard level V 4 2 7 Efficiency Output current 3 42A 2 56A 1 71A 0 85A input voltage 115 230Vrms sum of each efficiency division 4 should be greater than 87 It would be conformed to ENERGY STAR standard level V 4 3 OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS 4 3 1 Output Characteristics Output voltage load current voltage regulation and output noise of power supply should meet the specifications which defined on the tables below
4. ee Sn Perform the Display ___Isthelogo message display No Troubleshooting procedures in a section 6 3 Yes v Ifthe password message displays type the password then press Enter 1s Windows being loaded m No Perform diagnostics program le gt Figure 6 1 Troubleshooting flowchart 1 2 Chapter 6 ni o Perform the keyboard Does typed characters appear correctly No gt Troubleshooting procedures ra sell in section 6 5 Yes v Insert the diagnostics disk into FDD Then run the diagnostics test program Yes ie l in A Perform the FDD E en Is the diagnostics test loaded _ gt No gt Troubleshooting procedures in section 6 4 Yh v Allow each test to perform automatically pa a After confirming which Isanerror detected by any ofthe i diagnostics test re A diagnostics tests i ASETON PErLOrM AS appropriate procedure as outlined below No Y System is normal End Figure 6 1 Troubleshooting flowchart 2 2 If the diagnostics program cannot detect an error the problem may be intermittent The test program should be executed several times to isolate the problem When a problem has been located perform the appropriate troubleshooting procedures as follows s If an error is detected by the main battery test perform the Power Supply Troubleshooting procedures in Section 6 2
5. condition 3 2 6 No load Power Consumption Maximum non load power consumption is less than 0 5W at 115Vac 60Hz and 230Vac 50HZ 3 2 7 Efficiency Warm Up 3 2 7 1 84 min at nominal input voltage maximum load and measured at the end of DC cable 3 2 7 2 Active mode efficiency More than 87 of average efficiency of 25 50 75 and 100 load tested at 115Vac and 230Vac Warm up after 30 minutes 3 3 OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS 3 3 1 Output Characteristics Output voltage load current voltage regulation and output noise of power supply should meet the specifications which defined on the tables below Table 1 Electrical Characteristics overview 4 5A typ Vo regulation 18 0V 20 0V 5 minutes duration 100Vac and 240Vac 25 C It had better test with customer s system Note 2 Max Ripple Voltage 300mVp p Note 3 amb 25 C 40C Line Regulation t1 Dynamic Load Vpp amp l 8V Note4 Full Load amp 115Vac 60Hz input Phase 90 degree Hold up Time Vo 18 05Vdemin amb 25 C Note 5 Full Load amp 115Vac 60Hz input amb 25 C Note 5 Full Load amp 115Vac 60Hz input 2SMax Operating Temp 5 C to 40 C Note 5 30 mS Max 3 3 2 Output Protection 3 3 2 1 Short Circuit Protection Output can be shorted without damage The adaptor shall be auto recovery It will enter into normal condition when the fault condition is removed 3 3 2 2 Over Voltage Protection The output shall be
6. 0 to 59 INCREASE REDUCE System Date mm dd yy This is the help for the month field Vaild range is from 1 to 12 Error checking will be done against month day year combinations that are not supported INCREASE REDUCE mm dd yy This is the help for the day field Vaild range is from 1 to 31 Error checking will be done against month day year combinations that are not supported INCREASE REDUCE mm dd yy This is the help for the year field Vaild range is from 2000 to 2009 Error checking will be done against month day year combinations that are not supported INCREASE REDUCE 10 2 2 Advanced InsydeH20 Setup Utility 19 Main Advanced Security Boot Exit Num lock lt Off gt Peripheral Configuration VT lt Enabled gt l Configuration SATA as lt AHCI gt Details see the following POST Hotkey Delay lt 0 gt Help Information UMA Share Memory lt 64M gt Size USB Legacy lt Enable gt FA N Select F5 F6 Change F9 Setup Help Item Values Defaults Esc lt gt Select Enter Select F10 Save and Exit Screen SubMenu Exit Numlock Enter this menu you can choose the ON or Off in this submenu Peripheral Configuration Enter this menu it can display the submenu Bluetooth lt Enable gt Wlan lt Enable gt Camera lt Enable gt Card Read lt Enable gt Azalia lt Auto gt You can select Enabled or Disabled in
7. 11 AOh DDh 62 bytes for DMI type 11 OS_SKU DEh 1 byte for OS type Unused DFh Unused GUID EOh E7h 8 bytes for GUID BomOnDate On Date E8h EAh 3 wSbytesforbomondate for born on date EEPROM initialized i SS to AAh when the EEPROM get initialized Reseved ECh EFh Reseved NINE e type ie for US UK JP keyboard Keyboard BIOS used 1 byte for Keyboard BIOS used Branding 1 byte for Branding KMS KMS active flag Reserved for keyboard Reserved 2 bytes for keyboard used Unused Unused Assettag number 200h 64 bytes for DMI Type 3 23Fh LAN MAC Address 240h 6 bytes for LAN without 245h EEPROM Unused Unused FEMME ACPI OEM ID 6 bytes for ACPI OEM ID Unused Unused ACPI OEM Table ID 270h 8 bytes for ACPI OEM Table ID 277h Reserved 278h Reserved 7FFh 9 7 OEM Active 1 0 2 0 2 1 and KMS activation Support 16 a ly OEM Activation 1 0 a k a SLP 1 0 is used to activate Windows XP To support it BIOS needs to populate OEM string in the 0xF000 segment during POST OEM Activation 2 0 a k a SLP 2 0 is used to activate Windows Vista To support it BIOS needs to populate ACPI SLIC table during POST For projects supports Windows 7 SLP 2 1 is required to support For projects supports Windows 8 OA 3 0 is required to support MS claims the Windows marker is MS s IP and cannot appear on non Windows OS SKUs An EEPROM flag OS_SKU refe
8. Back to previous screen Exit Discarding Changes Allows the user to discard changes and continue the boot operation The following message is prompted when user press Enter on the item Exit Discarding Changes Yes No Yes Discard Changes and Continue the boot operation No Back to previous screen Load Optimal Defaults Allows the user loads default value in CMOS Setup The following message is prompted when user press Enter on this item Load Optimal Defaults Yes No It still stay in Setup when press a key Help information Exit Saving Changes Exit system setup and save your changes Exit Discarding Changes Exit system setup and without saving your changes Load Optimal Defaults Load Optimal Defaults 10 2 5 Secure Boot Setting This menu shows the security boot setting it s for end user to enable disable secure boot and erase restore secure boot key Secure Boot Setting System Status Secure Boot Database unlocked Enforcing Secure Boot Disabled Options Enforce Secure Boot lt Disabled gt Erase all Secure Boot Settings lt Disabled gt Restore Secure Boot to Factory lt Disable gt Settings Details see the following Help Information 24 TN Select Item lt Enter gt Select Entry ESC Exit Menu F10 Save and Exit Help information Enforce Secure Boot Select
9. VGA Suspend New Card Suspend Audio Suspend Hard Disk Power Down ODD Power Down Super I O Power Down S4 Sleeping State System Saves all system states and data onto disk prior to power off the whole system 5 4 Device Power Management Under ACPI mode the device specific power management supported by this notebook includes the CPU throttling monitor power management and the hard disk 5 4 1 CPU power management e ACPI mode The operating system detects when the system is idle and places the CPU in one of the 3 CPU low power states C1 C2 C3 up to C6 depending on how much latency it believes the system can afford The C1 state is simply the CPU halt instruction The C2 state is the CPU stop grant state The C3 state is the CPU stops clock state The CPU stays in this state until an interrupt occurs 5 4 2 Hard Disk The operating system uses the spin down timer of the hard drive to set time outs The BIOS time out of the hard disk must be disabled in ACPI mode The user can sets the hard disk spin down time out in the control panel power applet 5 4 3 Display Device The monitor can be turned off after a period of no activity based on the settings of the OS 5 4 4 System Wake Up Sources The table below lists the wake up events for all low power states Events 3 S4 S5 Process required Internal Keyboard Yes No No No Internal pointing device No No No No USB No No No
10. speakers still do not work properly 2e Chapter 6 10 CD ROM DVD Troubleshooting START Perform audio CD check Procedure 1 Audio CD functions ok Perform drive No cleaning check Procedure 2 Yes vw Perform software check Procedure 3 Perform diagnostic test Procedure 4 Perform connection and replacement check Procedure 5 Replace system board T END Figure 6 10 CD ROM DVD drive troubleshooting process This section describes how to determine if the computers internal DVD ROM drive or CD RW DVD ROM drive is functioning properly Figure 6 10 outlines the process Perform the steps below starting with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as required Procedure 1 Audio CD test Procedure 2 Drive cleaning check Procedure 3 Software check Procedure 4 Diagnostic test Procedure 5 Connection and replacement check Procedure 1 Audio CD check First insert an audio CD into the CD DVD drive If it works the problem is not with the drive Go to Procedure 3 If the audio CD does not work go to Procedure 2 If the CD DVD LED on the front panel does not light when the disc is played and the drive gives no response go straight to Procedure 3 Procedure 2 Drive cleaning check Insert a CD DVD drive cleaning disk into the drive clean according to the drive cleaning product instructions If the problem persists go to Pro
11. the above submenu and in the submenu Azalia lt Auto gt you also can select Auto Enable or Disable VT You can select the Disabled or Enabled in this menu Configure SATA as Choose HDD mode through selecting the IDE mode or AHCI mode UMA Share Memory Size You can select the share memory size for UMA use 32MB 64MB 128MB 256MB 512MB could be selected This select only showed on UMA unit USB Legacy You can select the Disabled or Enabled in this menu according to the owner requests Help information NumLock Selects Power on state for Numlock Peripheral Configuration Configures the peripheral devices Bluetooth Wlan Camera Card Read Azalia Enable or Disable this device and in the submenu Azalia lt Auto gt you also can select Auto Enable or Disable VT Virtualization Technology Enable Disable Configure SATA As Set Harddisk Controller Configure Type IDE AHCI POST HotKey Delay Customizable amount of time for the user to press HotKey at POST UMA Share Memory Size Select DVMT5 0 Pre Allocated Fixed Graphics Memory size used by the Internal Graphics USB Legacy USB devices boot and access in DOS If disable USB Legacy USB device can not boot 10 2 3 Security Menu This menu shows the security setting such as TPM User and Supervisor Password HDD Password and Power on Password InsydeH20 Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Boot Exit 20 Supervisor Password Clear
12. the computer The computer automatically detects the external display Press Fn F3 to switch to the external display If the external display works correctly the internal LCD may be damaged Go to Procedure 3 If the external monitor appears to have the same problem as the internal monitor the system board may be damaged Go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 Diagnostic check The Display Test program is stored on the computers Diagnostics disk This program checks the display controller on the system board Insert the Diagnostics disk in the computers floppy disk drive turn on the computer and run the test Refer to Chapter 3 Tests and Diagnostics for details If an error is detected go to Procedure 3 If an error is not detected the display is functioning properly Procedure 3 Connector and replacement check The FL inverter board LCD module and system board are connected to the display circuits Any of these components may be damaged Replacement Procedures for instructions on how to disassemble the computer and then perform the following checks Check 1 Make sure the DDRRAM module is seated properly Test display again If the problem still exits replace the DDRRAM module If the problem still exists perform check 2 Check 2 Replace the FL inverter board with a new one and test display again If the problem still exists perform Check 3 Check 3 Replace the LCD module with a new one and test display again If the probl
13. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Cycle Life 70 after 300 70 after 300 70 after 300 70 after 300 cycles cycles cycles cycles Nominal Charging 12 6 12 6 12 6 12 6 Voltage V Nominal Charging 3 08 3 15 3 57 3 6 Current A Protection Function OVP OVP OVP OVP UVP UVP UVP UVP OTP OTP OTP OTP OCP OCP OCP OCP 2 2 Battery Connector Pin Assignment Connector Male on M B C144DD 109A8 L 9P Connector Female on Battery SUYIN 200274FS009G128Z Battery Positive Terminal Battery Positive Terminal Identify pin Floating Battery In Function Pin Connect 10KQ Thermistor to GND SMBus data interface I O pin SMBus clock interface I O pin Battery Negative Terminal 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Battery Negative Terminal Battery cannot be charged or discharged unless this pin is connected to GND QUT IVA VITTI 3 AC Adapter 65W PK10000KL10 3 1 SCOPE This specification describes the physical functional and electrical characteristics of the 65 watts single output 19V 3 42A switching power supply 3 2 INPUT CHARACTERISTICS 3 2 1 Input Voltage Input voltage range 90 264Vac 3 2 2 Input Frequency Input frequency range 47 63 Hz 3 2 3 Input current 1 5A Max at 100Vac input voltage 3 2 4 Inrush Current No damage meet fuse and bridge diode t de rating specified 3 2 5 Leakage Current The AC leakage current is less than 75 4A when adapter is connected to 240Vac 50Hz at normal
14. A 5VALWP 4 75V 5 0V 5 25V 0 2V OA 3 18A 4 55A 6 5A 1 8VSP 1 71V 1 8V_ 1 89V 0 09V 0A 1 67A 2 387A_ 3 41A 1 5VP 1 455V 1 5V 1 545V_ 0 075V 0A 3 92A 5 6A 8A 0 75VSP 0 7125V 0 75V 0 7875V 0 038V 0A 0 6A 1 5A 2A 1 05VCCP_ 0 9975V 1 05V 1 1025V 0 05V_ 0A 8 12A 11A 16 8A VCCSA 0 855V 0 9V 0 945V_ 0 045V 0A 3 53A 5 04A 7 2A CPU_CORE 0 6V 1V 1 05V 0 05V_ 0A 36A 43A 53A GFX_CORE 0 85V 0 95V 0 975V_ 0 20V OA 11 2A 15 98A 22 82A Fast Charge 12 54V 12 6V 12 66V 0 1V 3600mA 3600mA 3600mA 3600mA LIION Trickle 12 54V 12 6V 12 66V 0 1V 220mA_ 220mA 220mA 220mA charge VIN current 18V 19V 20V 0 1V OA 3 0A 3 79A 4 74A Protection OVP 5VALWP 112 5 117 5 3VALWP 112 5 117 5 1 5VP 111 119 1 05VCCP 111 119 VCCSA 111 119 VGA_Core 119 124 CPU_CORE Vo Vset gt 200Mv 1us OCP 5VALWP 7 44A 3VALWP 6 48A 1 8VSP 4 88A 1 5VP 9 926A 1 05VCCP 20 16A 0 75VSP 2 12A VCCSA 8 18A GFX_Core 33A CPU_CORE 60A 1 2 Interface between Power with M B DC DC Signals YO Voltage Level Description FSTCHG l 0 3 3V High Active system use this signal to control ISL6251 charge action IREF l 0 3 3V High Active system use this signal to control charge current CHGVADJ l 0 3 3V High Active system use this signal to control charge voltage SYSON I 0 3 3V High Active system use this signal
15. CD panel Remove four screws and separate panel from cover as below Turn over the panel and remove LVDS cable connector 1 2 3 Disassemble wireless cable and LVDS camera cable Disassemble wireless cable first tear out AL foil part then remove Wireless module Remove camera module 1 2 4 Disassemble LCD hinge 3 1 3 Upper disassemble Remove one screw and take off the Touchpad FFC then take off bracket and touchpad board 1 4 HDD ODD module disassemble 1 4 1 HDD disassemble Remove 4 screws as below photo L 1 4 2 ODD disassemble Remove two screws and take off ODD bracket then follow the red arrow direction loosen ODD bezel hook hapter6 Testing and Troubleshooting 1 Testing and Troubleshooting The purpose of this chapter is to provide a systematic method of isolating problems you may have with the PBL1X series Notebook Computer We assume that you have a basic understanding of DOS based computer systems as well as knowledge of standard troubleshooting procedures This manual is written under the assumption that the problems are indeed related with Notebook itself The improper usage and application software problems are excluded in this chapter The system BIOS Beep Code is an integrated unit to detect some errors in the system board This beep code will give immediate identification of certain system board problems If the troublesho
16. Chapter 1 System Description Specification 1 SCOPE This document describes the functional specifications for the Compal Notebook personal computer VBL30 31series The system is hardware and software compatible with the IBM PN ATX personal computer 1 1 CPU e Intel Sandy Bridge or Ivy Bridge based e Celeron Pentium Dual Core 1 7G 1 8G 1 9G 2 2G 2 3G 2 4G 1 2 Chipset e HM700rHM75 1 3 Memory e Support DDR3 1333MHz 1G 2G 4G e Support 2 So DIMMS up to Max 8GB 1 4 Display e 14 5 2mm 16 9 LED backlight LCD e HD 1366 x 768 1 5 Graphics Chip e No only for VBL30 e AMD Radeon HD 7450M 1GB DDR3 SRAM only for VBL31 1 6 Audio e HD Audio Speakers 2 1 5W Microphone in and Headphone out 1 7 Camera Option e 1 0M Pixel CMOS Camera 1 8 Keyboard e NAW20 chocolate cap e 86 87 keys support with 101 102 key emulation without stick point e Windows key Application key Standard pitch 2 5mm travel length e Multi Language support 1 9 Hard Disk Drive HDD e 2 5 9 5mm SATA HDD e 250G 320G 500G 5400 7200rpm e 2 5 7 0mm SATA HDD e 320G 500G 5400rpm e 250G 320G 500G 5400 7200rpm e 2 5 7 0mm SATA HDD e 320G 500G 5400rpm 1 10 Optical Disc Drive ODD e Fixed 12 7mm height tray SATA ODD e DVD Super Multi DVD RAM R RW R RW 8X write e Support Double Layer Recording is required 1 11 Communication e Nomodem s NoWWAN e LAN 10 100 Option 10 100 1000 Giga LAN e WLAN only or W L BT Combo Op
17. Details see the following Set Supervisor Password Help Information Power on Password Enabled F1 N Select F5 F6 Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Help Item Esc lt gt Select Enter Select F10 Save and Exit Exit Screen SubMenu 21 Supervisor Password Show the Password status Clear or Set Set Supervisor Install or Change the password Power on Password Enable or disable the Power on Password You only can enable disable Power on password after the Supervisor password is set Help information Set Supeivisor Password Install or change the password and the length of password must be greater than one word and less ten words Power on password Enable System will ask input password on post time Disable System will ask input pass word when go to Setup Utility Password behavior Supervisor Password and Power on Password After set the supervisor password power on password can enable or disable If only set the supervisor password system will request supervisor password before entering setup menu F2 Users have 3 chances to input supervisor password system will request shutdown if users input wrong password 3 times If set power on password system will request the password after power on the machine Users have 3 chances to input power on password system will request shutdown if users input wrong password 3 times 10 2 4 Boot Menu This menu allows the user to decide the order o
18. Disable to Suspend enforcement of Secure Boot Checks Erase all Secure Boot Settings Enable this option will erase all Secure Boot Settings This action will clear four variables PK KEK db and dbx Restore Secure Boot to Factory Settings Restore all of the Secure Boot Settings to default factory settings and enable Secure Boot The following message is prompted when exiting Secure Boot Setting Operation is completed System will reset OK 11 OS Compatibility Windows 8 25 Chapter 3 Hardware 1 Major Sub assembly Specification System interconnection 1 1 Top View For VBL30 UMA HM70 NO Description 1 T P Conn 2 Power Board Conn 3 K B Conn 4 Mic Conn 5 USB Board Conn 6 3 int Reader 7 Speaker Conn 1 2 Bottom view For VBL30 NO Description NO Description 8 Battery Conn 15 FAN Conn 9 DDRIII H4 0 Conn 16 D SUB Conn 10 DDRIII H8 0 Conn 17 RJ45 Conn 11 SATA ODD Conn 18 HDMI Conn 12 CPU Socket 19 MINI Card Conn 13 SATA HDD Conn 20 USB3 0 Conn 14 LVDS Conn 1 3 top View For VBL30 UMA HM75 NO Description 1 T P Conn 2 Power Board Conn 3 K B Conn 4 Mic Conn 5 USB Board Conn 6 3 int Reader 7 Speaker Conn 1 4Bottom view For VBL30 NO Description NO Description 8 Battery Conn 15 FAN Conn 9 DDRIII H4 0 Conn 16 D SUB Con
19. Execute TAT TDP all components pass thermal spec 3 Skin spec 25 C ambient Execute 3DMark2006 a Logic lower lt AT 28 deg C b Touch pad lt AT 13 deg C c Palm rest amp Keyboard lt AT 15 deg C d Strip cover lt AT 25 deg C e LCD bezel lt AT 25 deg C Application Driver CD W User Manual 2 System Controls 2 1 Buttons 2 1 1 Power Button The activity of the power button is as follows e If system is Off Hibernate System will be turned on while Power switch is depressed by more than 100 ms e If system is in Standby state System will resume while Power switch is depressed by more than 100 ms e f system on with legacy mode depress this button will turn off power If system is running in ACPI OS the power button acts as the sleep button and let OS controls the policy of power button which is defined in Power Option under the OS 2 1 2 Power Button Over ride Holding down the Power Button for 4 seconds will cause an unconditional transfer to the off state without notifying the operating system 2 1 3 Lid switch If the system is running under legacy mode e Closing the lid will turn off LCD backlight e If the system is running under ACPI mode e The operating system will determine what action to take when the lid is opened and closed The function of lid switch will follow the OS setting in power management Nothing Standby or Hibernate If nothing the backlight must turn
20. IOS e Suspend to DRAM HDD e Security Power On Password Supervisor Password e USB memory Boot support e Support SMBIOS 2 4 PCI2 2 e Support PXE e Wake on LAN from S3 e Wake on LAN from S4 S5 in AC mode 1 23 OS e Windows 8 x64 1 24 Mini Card e One Mini card slot for WLAN Half size card 1 25 Security e BIOS Password Kensington lock 1 26 Regulatory e EMI FCC B CE VCCI BSMI e Safety BSMI CB 1 27 Environment e Temperature Operating 5 35 C Storage 20 65 C e Humidity 10 90 without condensation e Altitude Operating sea level up to 10 000 ft Storage sea level up to 40 000 ft 1 28 Thermal e Thermal capacity could support TAT TDP or 3Dmark2006 operation at 35C ambient 1 29 Application e Driver CD W User Manual 2 Mechanical Specification FOR 14 Notebook 344mm W 237 5mm D 19 7mm H Front amp 33 3mm H Rear 2 2Kg including HDD DVD and BATT module 2 1 Option Pack s AC adapter 360 9g s HDD Pack 122 99 9 5mm s BATT Li ion 317 3 6cell s BATT Li ion 355g 6cell V DVD module 217 10 2 2 Mechanical Function V Removable HDD s Module DVD BATT V Battery changeable Li ion s For security can use Kensington Lock V Scissor type key board standard pitch 3 0 m m travel length 2 3 Mechanical Material V Plastic PC ABS Mitusbishi 8906C9 MB8800 V Mitusbishi BK30 TMB1615 ABS PC 15 TALC s BABYER DP3002 PC ABS Chapter 2 Software Specification 1 Sys
21. If there is no damage go to Check 2 Check 2 Make sure the AC adaptor cord and AC power cord are firmly plugged into the DC IN socket AC adaptor inlet and wall outlet If these cables are connected correctly go to Check 3 Check 3 Make sure that the DC IN input port socket is firmly secured to the system board of the computer If the DC IN input socket is loose go to Procedure 5 If it is not loose go to Check 4 Check 4 Use a millimeter to make sure that the AC adaptor output voltage is close to 19 V If the output is several percent lower than 19 V go to Check 5 If the output is close to 19 V go to Check 6 Check 5 Connect a new AC adaptor or AC power cord If the battery LED does not light go to Check 6 Check 6 Make sure the battery pack is installed in the computer correctly If the battery is properly installed and the battery LED still does not light go to Procedure 4 Procedure 4 Diagnostic check The power supply may not charge the battery pack Perform the following procedures Reinstall the battery pack Attach the AC adaptor and turn on the power If you cannot turn on the power go to Procedure 5 Run the Diagnostic test following the procedures described Tests and Diagnostics If no problem is detected the battery is functioning normally Procedure 5 Replacement check The system board may be disconnected or damaged Disassemble the computer following the steps described Replacem
22. No Lid Switch No No No No Power button Yes Yes Yes No LAN On board Yes Yes AC mode only Yes AC mode only Yes RTC Yes Yes AC mode only Yes AC mode only Yes Critical low battery Yes No No Yes Field Process required identifies that further process for the occurred events must be processed during wake up or resumes procedure 5 4 4 1 LAN LAN On board S3 Standby LAN is supported wake up from S3 w AC DC mode S4 Hibernation S5 LAN just only support wake up from S4 S5 w AC only Real Time Clock Alarm The Real Time Clock alarm interrupt will wake the system from Standby DC AC Hibernation AC mode only and S5 AC mode only Critical Low Battery Critical low battery event can wake the system from Standby DC mode in ACPI mode 5 5 Hibernation To support the hibernate state the save to disk partition or file will be created by the operating system if the user select to enable the hibernation It is the responsibility of the operating system to save the system state to a disk file and restore the system state when it is turned back on 6 ACPI Advanced Configuration and Power Interface 6 1 Introduction The Advanced Configuration and Power Interface ACPI is a well specified power management and configuration mechanism It evolves the existing collection of power management codes APM PnP BIOS and Etc 6 2 ACPI Sleep Status BIOS must support the following sleep states S3 S4 and S5 6 3 Fast Re
23. Overheated Discharging Amber blinking Battery within low state 1 second on 1second The system is protected and cannot be re powered off on without the AC power connected Amber amp Blue Battery error blinking Flash 500ms on 500ms off Color off Battery not in low or critical low state in discharging state Table 2 2 POWER LED Power supply status POWER LED System Power On Power button LED is White Solid on solid white Power LED is solid blue Blue Solid on System Suspended White blinking Blue blinking System Power Off Off To check the power supply status install a battery pack and connect an AC adaptor to the DC IN port on the computer and to a power supply If the Battery LED is not lit go to Procedure 2 9 Chapter 6 Procedure 2 Adaptor battery replacement A faulty adaptor may not supply power or may not charge the battery Perform Check 1 Check 1 Connect a new AC adaptor If the problem is not resolved go to Check 2 Check 2 Insert a new battery If the problem is still not resolved go to Procedure 3 Procedure 3 Power supply connection check The power supply wiring diagram is shown below AC adaptor cord AC power cord AC System Batte adaptor board y Any of the connectors may be disconnected Perform Check 1 Check 1 Disconnect the AC power cord from wall outlet Check the power cable for breaks If the power cord is damaged connect a new AC power cord
24. Table 1 Electrical Characteristics overview 2 gt Y m GG fax Ripple Voltaze 300mVp p Note 1 amb 25U 40U Full Load amp 115Vac 60Hz input Phase 90 degree Jo 18 05Vdcmin jamb 25 C Full Load amp 115Vac 60Hz input Operating Temp 0 C to 40 C 4 3 2 Protection 4 3 2 1 Short Circuit Protection The power supply shall be latch off and no damage for output shorting rail to secondary The output will recover automatically when the short is removed 4 3 2 2 Over Voltage Protection The Power supply shall be latch off before output voltage reached 29V And the power supply shall not recover automatically unless the AC reset Test condition 230Vac 0 5A load 4 3 2 3 Over Temperature Protection No deformation and no discoloration on case 4 3 3 Overshoot Output overshoot during power on and power off shall not exceed 20V 4 4 ENVIRONMENT SECTION 4 4 1 Operating Temperature 0 C to 40 C 4 4 2 Operating Humidity 20 to 80 RH 4 4 3 Storage Temperature 20 C to 85 C 4 4 4 Storage Humidity 5 to 95 RH 4 5 RELIABILITY 4 5 1 MTBF 130K hrs minimum at 25 C and 230Vac input voltage full load 3 42A 4 5 2 Vibration 4 5 2 1 Non Operating Acceleration 3 5G Frequency 10 500Hz Vibration duration 60 minutes Force Direction at X Y Z 4 5 2 2 Operating Acceleration 1G Frequency 10 500Hz Vibration duration 60 minutes Force Direction at X Y Z 4 5 3 Drop A sample has no saf
25. bleshooting PerformADMIconnection check procedure 1 Does replace HDMI cable fuction property replace HDMI cable PerformADMHIset check Precedure 2 s HDHI fuctioning Ok s replace system board Figure 6 7 HDMI troubleshooting process Use different HDMI set To determine if the computers HDMI port is functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 7 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue as instructed Procedure 1 HDMI connection check Procedure 2 HDMI set check Procedure 1 HDMI connection check The HDMI cable may be damaged or the connections may be loose Perform Check 1 Check 1 Make sure HDMI cable is firmly plugged into both the HDMI set and the HDMI port of the computer If the cable is connected correctly go to Check 2 Check 2 Make sure the HDMI port is firmly secured to the system board of the computer If the malfunction remains go to Check 3 Check 3 The HDMI cable may be damaged Replace with a good cable If the malfunction remains go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 HDMI set check The HDMI set may be faulty Perform Check 1 Check 1 Try using the set for HDMI reception If it does not work the set may be damaged If the set does work perform Check 2 Check 2 Try connecting a different HDMI to the computer If the replacement television works the original set may be damaged If the replacement set does
26. cedure 3 Procedure 3 Software check Ensure that the appropriate driver has been installed on the computer for the CD DVD drive Procedure 4 Diagnostic test The CD ROM DVD ROM test program stored in the Diagnostics Disk will test the drive s ability to play an audio CD as well as the functions of the CD control buttons If any errors occur while executing the diagnostic program go to Procedure 5 Procedure 5 Connection check and replacement check The DVD ROM drive or the CD RW DVD ROM drive connects to the system board The drive may be disconnected or the drive or system board may be damaged Replacement Procedures and perform the following checks Check 1 Make sure the drive is firmly connected to the system board If the connection is good and there is still an error go to Check 2 Check 2 The drive or drive cable may be defective or damaged Replacement Procedures If the drive is still not functioning properly perform Check 3 Check 3 The system board may be damaged za Chapter 6 11 Wireless LAN Troubleshooting START v Perform diagnostic test Procedure 1 Y l Wireless LAN lt Was an wireless LAN problem delected gt No system is not faulty Yes v Perform connector and replacement check Procedure 2 v Replace wireless LAN antenna unit v Replace system board END Figure 6 11 Wireless LAN troubleshooting process The wireless LAN antenna wire wi
27. cts the Shut down Option in the Windows Shut Down menu Critical Low battery depends on ACPI OS setting Thermal critical shutdown performed by EC firmware Note1 The backlight of LCD should be off when WOL from S3 as it is remote wake up Note2 the S3 gt S4 transition results in the system transitioning to the SO state first so OS can save the context to the hard disk The system BIOS KBC will not be involved for S3 gt S4 transition The system power scheme will wake the machine from S3 and then transition to S4 Hibernation The backlight of LCD is off during this transition 6 5 Storage Devices and Batteries Possible storage devices are FDD HDD CD ROM and DVD ROM e Floppy Disk and Hard Disk CD ROM and DVD ROM The BIOS must report the correct types of these devices if the drive is installed in the system during POST Two devices which belong to the same category are not supported in this notebook e Batteries The BIOS must follow ACPI specification and report the correct number of the installed battery and status 6 6 Bootable Device The system is capable of booting from onboard HDD CD ROM DVD ROM external USB Floppy and USB ATA Flash device 6 7 Embedded controller The keyboard controller will act as the ACPI embedded controller and support the ACPI EC protocol and interface 11 7 PC2001 The notebook must meet Microsoft Logo requirements in accordance with the PC2001 Guide and the M
28. data item Type 1 e System serial number 64 alphanumeric characters with 12 character bundle number e System manufacturer name 16 alphanumeric characters e System product name 32 alphanumeric characters e System version 32 alphanumeric characters e UUID 32 Hexadecimal numbers Type 2 e System manufacturer name 16 alphanumeric characters e Motherboard Product name XXX e System serial number 64 alphanumeric characters with 12 character bundle number Type 3 e System manufacturer name 16 alphanumeric character e System serial number 64 alphanumeric characters with 12 character bundle number e Asset tag number 128 alphanumeric characters 9 5 Default SMBIOS Value Name Default Value System Serial Number 123456789 Manufacturer name Compal System version X XX System product name project code 15 9 6 EEPROM There is one EEPROM that is used to store many important system and user data in the notebook some data are reserved for future to use The size of the EEPROM is 2K bytes The EEPROM map is listing as below System Serial Number 00h 1Fh 32 bytes of Serial number 20h 3Fh 32 bytes of Bundle number Manufacturer name 40h 4Fh 16 bytes for DMI type 1 2 3 System version 50h 6Fh 32 bytes of System version for DMI type 1 UUID 70h 7Fh 16 bytes for UUID for DMI type 1 System product name 80h 9Fh 32 bytes of System product name DMI type
29. e Release and take off two screws as below Take off HDD door from slot as photo 1 1 5 Disassemble fan and thermal module first take off 7pcs screw pull out fan CONN then take out fan and thermal 1 1 6 Disassemble WiFi card first pull out RF connector then take off 1pcs screw and take out WiFi card pi fo Ja 1 1 7 Disassemble RAM TITTI Il PK053002vV80 101 tt 1 1 8 Disassemble CPU unlock CPU upright airward take out CPU Use single type screw drive unlock 1 1 9 Disassemble LVDS cable 1 1 11 reverse machine and disassemble strip cover Use hand loose hook as photo Reverse the machine first and disassemble strip cover from left to right sides as below photo then take off strip cover by up and down 1 1 12 Disassemble Keyboard Use hand pull up Keyboard and open up Keyboard latch by upwards turn down the keyboard and release the cable from lower 1 1 13 Open up power B gt speaker cable connector gt T P FFC amp MIC cable connector remove power B and speaker take off 4pcs screw 1 1 14 Disassemble upper take off 6pcs screw 1 1 15 Disassemble USB module Unlock USB FFC loose the USB hook and remove the USB broad 1 1 16 Disassemble M B Remove 1pcs screw and loosen DC IN cable 1 1 17 Take off W L line and LVDS line i 1 2 LCD Part 1 2 1 Disassemble LCD bezel take off 4pcs screw 1 2 2 Disassemble L
30. e 00 00 00 System Date 01 01 2011 Processor Type Type XXXGHZ Details see the following System Memory Speed XXXX MHz Help Information Total Memory XXX MB EC version XXX System BIOS Version X XX XX Intel ME Version X X XX XXXX HDD Disk XXXXXX CD DVD Rom XXXXXX Serial Number XXXXXX UUID XXXXXX F1 Help N Select Item Esc lt gt Select F5 F6 Change F9 Setup Exit Screen Values Defaults F10 Save and Exit System Time and System Date The hour is displayed with 24 hour format The values set in these two fields take effect immediately Processor Type This field shows CPU type and speed System Memory Speed This field reports the memory speed of the extended memory with an integer in the system Total Memory This field reports the memory size of the extended memory with an integer in the system HDD Disk This field reports the HDD string CD DVD Rom This field reports the CD DVD string Serial Number This field displays the serial number max size support to 32 bytes UUID 18 This field display the UUID the length is 16 bytes Help information System Time hh mm ss This is the help for the hour field Vaild range is from 0 to 23 INCREASE REDUCE hh mm ss This is the help for the minute field Vaild range is from 0 to 59 INCREASE REDUCE hh mm ss This is the help for the second field Vaild range is from
31. e 2 If the external keyboard appears to have the same problem as the internal keyboard the system board may be damaged Procedure 2 Diagnostic test Run the Diagnostic Program which will automatically execute the Keyboard Test Refer to Chapter 3 Tests and Diagnostics for more information on how to run the program If an error is located go to Procedure 3 If an error does not occur the keyboard is functioning properly Procedure 3 Connector and replacement check The keyboard and or system board may be disconnected or damaged Replacement Procedures and perform the following checks Check 1 Make sure the keyboard cable is firmly connected to the system board If the connection is loose reconnect firmly and repeat Procedure 2 If there is still an error go to Check 2 Check 2 The keyboard may be damaged If the problem still exists perform Check 3 Check 3 The system board may be damaged Replace it with a new one 12 Chapter 6 5 External USB Devices Troubleshooting START Perform external device and connection check Procedure 1 v ct Does the device function sentite Yes when connected toa different USB port Does an alternative USB Yes Original USB device function correctly device is faulty I No Y Replace system board Procedure 2 Figure 6 5 External USB device troubleshooting process 13 To determine if the computer s external USB devices ar
32. e OS 8 8 Fast Boot The BIOS POST time should be within 5 seconds or less The BIOS POST time is measured by Microsoft Velocity Test Suite The POST timing test needs to include the worst case drive configuration internal or external and worst case memory configuration available via the retail channels The POST time testing environment does not include attachable devices such as USB keyboards external monitors printers PC Cards Port Replicators and etc For Win8 the BIOS POST time should be within 4 seconds or less Note if have TPM device the BIOS Post Time should add extra 300 microseconds for initial 8 9 Wireless Control 14 BIOS should report the wireless device include WLAN and BT exist and enable status 9 Customer Specific Features 9 1 Display of System Type and BIOS Version Number on Boot The development BIOS Version should start from 0 01 and the formal BIOS for MP should start from 1 00 9 2 CMOS RAM management For UEFI Code CMOS just reserve for kernel code Chipset code the variable storage had been replaced by flash part 9 3 CMOS Requirement for Debug Purpose For debug purpose BIOS could save data to CMOS NVO access by port 70h 71h offset 48h 4Fh 6Ch 6Fh and 70h 7Fh NV1 access by port 72h 73h offset 40h 57h and 60h 7Fh which are reserved for OEM use 9 4 System Management BIOS SM BIOS version 2 7 DMI 2 0 Limited DMI 2 0 BIOS information is provided BIOS version number is type 0
33. e functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 5 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue as instructed Procedure 1 External device and connection check Procedure 2 Replace system board Procedure 1 External device and connection check The USB device may be damaged or the connection may be faulty Perform Check 1 Check 1 Make sure USB device cable is firmly plugged into one of the USB sockets If the cable is connected correctly go to Check 2 Check 2 Plug the USB device into another USB socket there are three in all If the USB device still does not work go to Check 4 If the device functions correctly when connected to another USB port go to Check 3 Check 3 Make sure that the USB socket is firmly secured to the system board of the computer If the malfunction remains the system board may be damaged Go to Procedure 2 Check 4 Connect an alternative USB device to one of the computers USB ports and then boot the computer The computer automatically detects the external device If the alternative USB device works correctly the original device may be damaged and should be replaced If the alternative USB device appears to have the same problem as the original device the system board may be damaged Go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 Replace system board If the error persists the system board may be damaged 14 Chapter 6 6 CRT troubleshooting Perform CRT co
34. ectly Perform connection check Procedure 3 Figure 6 9 Speaker troubleshooting process To determine if the computers built in speakers are functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 9 outlines the process First adjust the speaker volume to an appropriate level Start with Procedure 1 and continue as instructed Procedure 1 Audio source test Procedure 2 Earphone test Procedure 3 Connection check Procedure 4 Replacement check Procedure 1 Audio source test Try different audio sources e g an audio CD and digital music file to determine whether the fault is in the speaker system or not If not all sources have sound problems the problem is in the source devices If all have the same problem continue with Procedure 2 Procedure 2 Earphone test Connect a set if earphones or external speakers If these function correctly go to Procedure 3 If they do not function correctly the system board may be defective or damaged Replace it with a new one Procedure 3 Connection check Disassemble the computer following the steps described Replacement Procedures and make sure the speaker cable is firmly connected to the system board If the stereo speakers are still not functioning properly go to Procedure 4 Procedure 4 Replacement Check If the stereo speakers don t sound properly the stereo speakers may be defective or damaged Replace them with new ones If the stereo
35. em still exists perform Check 4 Check 4 Replace the LCD FL cable with a new one and test display again If the problem still exists perform Check 5 Check 5 Replace the CPU with another of the same specifications If the problem still exists perform Check 6 Check 6 The system board may be damaged Replace it with a new one 10 Chapter 6 11 Keyboard Troubleshooting START v Perform external keyboard check Procedure 1 v Does the external keyboard function ok Yes Y Perform diagnostic check Procedure 2 Keyboard is not faulty Continue troubleshooting refer to Figure 2 1 Was a keyboard No problem detected Yes v Perform connector and replacement check Procedure 3 Figure 6 4 Keyboard troubleshooting process To determine if the computers keyboard is functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 5 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as instructed Procedure 1 External keyboard check Procedure 2 Diagnostic check Procedure 3 Connector and replacement check Procedure 1 External keyboard check Connect a USB keyboard to one of the computer s keyboard mouse ports then boot the computer The computer automatically detects the external keyboard If the external keyboard works correctly the internal keyboard or its connections may be faulty Go to Procedur
36. ent Procedures Check the connection between the AC adaptor and the system board After checking the connection perform Check 1 Check 1 Use a millimeter to make sure that the fuses on the system board are not blown If a fuse is not blown go to Check 2 If a fuse is blown go to Check 3 Check 2 Make sure that the battery cable is firmly connected to the system board If it is connected firmly go to Check 3 Check 3 The system board may be damaged Replace it with a new one following the instructions in Chapter 4 3 Chapter 6 3 Display Troubleshooting START v Perform external display check Procedure 1 v Does the external display function ok No v Perform diagnostic check Procedure 2 Display is not Was a display x faulty Continue problem detected troubleshooting refer to Figure 2 1 Yes Y Perform connector and _b replacement check Procedure 3 Figure 6 3 Display troubleshooting process This section describes how to determine if the Computers display is functioning properly The process is outlined in Figure 6 3 Start with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as instructed Procedure 1 External display check Procedure 2 Diagnostic check Procedure 3 Connector and replacement check Procedure 1 External display check Connect an external display to the computers external monitor port then boot
37. ety hazard after be subjected to 3 times impact which the sample must be dropped from 100 cm onto hard marble surface 4 6 SAFETY SECTION 4 6 1 Hi Pot Test The adaptor belongs to product of CLASS I its secondary is connected with protection earth directly According to safety IEC60950 and IEC60065 In Process Primary to secondary with PE AC 1500V or DC 2121V 10mA Max 1 Second for mass production 4 7 EMC SECTION 4 7 1 EMI design to meet following standards 4 7 1 1 FCC part 15J Class B United States Federal Communication Commission FCC Rules and Regulations Part 15 Subpart J Class B Limit 4 7 1 2 CISPR 22 EN 55022 Class B 1998 Information technology equipment Radio disturbance Characteristics Limits and methods of measurement Definitions Information technology equipment ITE Class B Limit 4 7 2 EMS design to meet EN55024 standards 4 7 2 1 EN 61000 4 2 Electrostatic air discharge 15KV Contact Discharge 8KV criterion B 4 7 2 2 EN 61000 4 3 Radiated Susceptibility 3Vrms m criterion A 4 7 2 3 EN 61000 4 4 Transient Burst t1KV criterion B 4 7 2 4 EN 61000 4 5 Surge Immunity Test 2KV common 1KV differential Criterion B 4 8 Safety compliance to following standards 10 E UL60950 Third Edition UL CUL USA Canada CAN CSA C22 2 No 60950 00 Third Edition EN os EN 60950 CE Europe CISPR 22 EN55022 Class B amp CISPR24 EN55024 e press AS NZS CISPR22 2004 KTL K
38. f boot devices to load the operating system Bootable devices include the diskette drive in module bay the onboard hard disk drive in module bay The default Boot Type is UEFI Boot Type the Boot page will show as below table InsydeH20 Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Boot Exit Boot Type lt UEFI Boot Type gt Details see the following EFI Boot priority order E Help Information XXXXXXX Boot Device Status Network boot lt Enabled gt PXE BOOT capability lt UEFI IPV4 IPV6 gt Fl Help N Select Item F5 F6 Change Values F9 Setup Defaults Esc Exit lt Select Menu Enter Select E SubMenu F10 Save and Exit If the boot mode is Dual Boot Type the Boot page will show as below table InsydeH20 Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Boot Exit Boot Type lt Dual Boot Type gt EFI Device First lt Disabled gt Legacy Boot priority order Details see the following Floppy Drive XXXXXXXXXX Help Information Hard Disk Drive0 XXXXXXXXXX Hard Disk Drivel XXXXXXXXXX CD DVD ROM Drive XXXXXXXXXXX USB HDD XXXXXXXXXX USB CD DVD ROM XXXXXXXXXX Network boot XXXXXXXXXX 22 EFI Boot priority order XXXXXXXX Boot Device Status Floppy Drive lt Enabled gt CD DVD ROM Drive lt Enabled gt Network boot lt Enabled gt
39. he system board Make sure the camera cable is firmly connected to the camera board and system board Replacement Procedures for instructions on how to disassemble the computer and then perform the following checks If any of the connections are loose reconnect firmly If any of the connections is damaged or there is still an error go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 Camera replacement check The camera board or cable may be defective or damaged 13 Blue tooth function Troubleshooting START v Perform bluetooth function procedure 1 Ba ra P DS lt Does blue tooth N Blue tooth lt K gt no gt module is not x function NG F Pa faulty Su B yes Perform blue tooth module replacement check procudure 2 v Replace system board end Figure 6 13 blue tooth trouble shooting process This section describes how to determine if the computers blue tooth is functioning properly Figure 6 13 outlines the process Perform the steps below starting with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as required Procedure 1 blue tooth connection check Procedure 2 blue tooth replacement check Procedure 1 blue tooth connection check The blue tooth is connected by the blue tooth cable to the system board Make sure the blue tooth cable is firmly connected to the blue tooth device and system board Replacement Procedures for ins
40. icrosoft Logo test programs 12 8 Miscellaneous Features 8 1 BIOS ROM It depends on the platform design architecture sharer ROM or Non Sharer ROM Intel ME SKU and so on Non Sharer ROM SBIOS and EC BIOS have each SPI ROM chip separately the EEPROM is inside EC BIOS area BIOS will copy a full set of EEPROM data to SBIOS ROM at the first POST or EEPROM data is updated to speed up the EEPROM access Sharer ROM The EC BIOS EEPROM and SBIOS are all inside one SPI ROM chip 8 2 USB Support This feature allows the use of a USB keyboard to access BIOS Setup and to be used in DOS without additional drivers USB floppy boot and Crisis Recovery from USB floppy is also supported The driver provides other USB devices support after loading the operating system 8 3 Flash utility one ROM file only The flash utility can be used to program both system and keyboard BIOS at the same time Before flash BIOS you must make sure that AC exist Or you will be forbidden to flash BIOS 8 4 Crisis Recovery This feature provides an opportunity for system that cannot boot up With a crisis floppy diskette the system can perform crisis recovery by using internal PS2 keyboard To perform crisis recovery using keyboard do the following Power off the system Plug in the USB floppy drive with crisis floppy diskette inserted Hold down Fn B keys Plug in AC adapter and make sure it is powered Power on the system from off state i e cold boot
41. ixel CMOS Camera Microphone Analog Type Internal Microphone TV tuner No System Status Indicators 1 Caps Lock White 1 Power Button LED White 1 LED for IDE HDD activity Blue 1 LED for System status Power On Suspend Blue 1 LED for Battery status Charging Full L1 L2 Amber Blue Amber 1 LED for Blue tooth Wireless Card Amber Control buttons Hot Key Power button support software off 4 sec x 1 Magnetic lid switch control for system standby wakeup or suspend resume User Keys No AC Adapter 65W 6 cell Battery Li On 18650 type 4400mAh 4500mAh 5100mAh 5200mAh Life Cycle 70 Design Capacity after 300 Cycles in 25degreeC Insyde BIOS Suspend to DRAM HDD Security Power On Password Supervisor Password USB memory Boot support software Support SMBIOS 2 4 PCI2 2 Support PXE Wake on LAN from S3 Wake on LAN from S4 S5 in AC mode OS Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit Mini Card One Mini card slot for WLAN Half size card Security BIOS Password Kensington lock EMI FCC B CE BSMI Regulatory Safety Compliant to UL CB BSMI WHQL LOGO Environment Temperature Operating 5 35 C Storage 20 65 C Humidity 10 90 without condensation Altitude Operating sea level up to 10 000 ft Storage sea level up to 40 000 ft Thermal 1 Thermal capacity 28 C ambient a Execute TAT TDP CPU no throttling 2 Components 35 C ambient a
42. izontal surface Horizontal Surface Consists of The Concrete Floor 2 Sample weight 214 g 3 Drop height 150 cm 3 5 4 Shock 3 5 4 1 Non Operating Acceleration 50G trapezoidal pulse duration 11ms 3 Shocks for each direction one time at 6 directions 3 5 4 2 Operating 3 6 SAFETY SECTION 3 6 1 Hi Pot Test 3 6 1 1 In Process O Primary to Secondary Voltage 3000VAC 10mA Max Ramp time 0 1Sec 3 6 1 2 FQC Final check 3 6 2 Safety conforming CECP gt BSMI gt C TICK gt GOST R gt IRAM gt KC PSB PSE TUV gt UL CCC CE 3 7 EMC SECTION 3 7 1 EMI design to meet following standards 3 7 1 1 FCC part 15J Class B 3 7 1 2 CISPR 22 EN 55022 Class B 3 7 2 EMS design to meet EN55022 standards EN 61000 3 2 2006 Class D EN 61000 3 3 1995 A1 2001 A2 2005 EN 55024 1998 A1 2001 A2 2003 IEC 61000 4 2 2001 ED 1 2 IEC 61000 4 3 2006 ED 3 0 IEC 61000 4 4 2004 ED 2 0 IEC 61000 4 5 2005 ED 2 0 IEC 61000 4 6 2006 ED 2 2 IEC 61000 4 8 2001 ED 1 1 Criterion B 3 8 ENVIRONMENT STANDARD 8 1 RoHS Directive 2002 95 EC 8 2 WEEE Directive 2002 96 EC 3 9 MECHANICAL SECTION 3 9 1 Weight 240 10g gram 3 9 2 Dimension 3 9 2 1 Outline Dimension 108 0 46 0 29 5 mm color Black 3 9 2 2 AC Inlet Type Socket C6 type 3 9 2 3 DC Cable Length 1800 mm UL1185 AWG 18 3 9 2 4 DC Connector Dimension OD 5 5 mm ID 2 5 mm Length 12 0 mm 4 AC Adapter 65W PK10000PK50
43. n 10 DDRIII H8 0 Conn 17 RJ45 Conn 11 SATA ODD Conn 18 HDMI Conn 12 CPU Socket 19 MINI Card Conn 13 SATA HDD Conn 20 USB2 0 Conn 14 LVDS Conn 1 5 Top View For VBL31 DIS HM70 essea ss NO Description 1 T P Conn 2 Power Board Conn 3 K B Conn 4 Mic Conn 5 USB Board Conn 6 3 int Reader 7 Speaker Conn 1 6 Bottom view For VBL31 NO Description NO Description 8 Battery Conn 15 FAN Conn 9 DDRIII H4 0 Conn 16 D SUB Conn 10 DDRIII H8 0 Conn 17 RJ45 Conn 11 SATA ODD Conn 18 HDMI Conn 12 CPU Socket 19 MINI Card Conn 13 SATA HDD Conn 20 USB3 0 Conn 14 LVDS Conn 1 7 Top View For VBL31 DIS HM75 NO Description 1 T P Conn 2 Power Board Conn 3 K B Conn 4 Mic Conn 5 USB Board Conn 6 3 int Reader 7 Speaker Conn 1 8 Bottom view For VBL31 NO Description NO Description 8 Battery Conn 15 FAN Conn 9 DDRIII H4 0 Conn 16 D SUB Conn 10 DDRIII H8 0 Conn 17 RJ45 Conn 11 SATA ODD Conn 18 HDMI Conn 12 CPU Socket 19 MINI Card Conn 13 SATA HDD Conn 20 USB2 0 Conn 14 LVDS Conn Chapter 4 DC DC CONVERTER 1 DC DC Power Plane 1 1 UMA V_min V_typ V_max Vripple lL min _typ _max L peal 3VALWP 3 135V 4 3 3V 3 465V 0 15V OA 2 2A 3 15A 4 5
44. nnection check procedure 1 Does replace CRT cable fuction property replace CRT cable Perform CRT set check Precedure 2 Use different CRT set s replace system board Figure 6 6 CRT troubleshooting process 15 To determine if the computers CRT port is functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 6 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue as instructed Procedure 1 CRT connection check Procedure 2 CRT set check Procedure 1 CRT connection check The CRT cable may be damaged or the connections may be loose Perform Check 1 Check 1 Make sure CRT cable is firmly plugged into both the CRT set and the CRT port of the computer If the cable is connected correctly go to Check 2 Check 2 Make sure the CRT port is firmly secured to the system board of the computer If the malfunction remains go to Check 3 Check 3 The CRT cable may be damaged Replace with a good cable If the malfunction remains go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 CRT set check The CRT set may be faulty Perform Check 1 Check 1 Try using the set for CRT reception If it does not work the set may be damaged If the set does work perform Check 2 Check 2 Try connecting a different CRT to the computer If the replacement television works the original set may be damaged If the replacement set does not work the system board may be damaged 16 Chapter 6 7 HDMI trou
45. not work the system board may be damaged 18 Chapter 6 8 Touch Pad Troubleshooting SR A START C p Touch Pad connection check Procedure 1 Touch Pad replacement check Procedure 2 Replace system board Figure 6 8 Touch Pad troubleshooting process To determine if the computers built in Touch Pad is functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 8 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue as instructed Procedure 1 Touch Pad connection check Procedure 2 Touch Pad replacement check Procedure 1 Touch Pad connection check The Touch Pad is connected by the Touch Pad FPC to the system board Make sure the Touch Pad FPC cable is firmly connected to the Touch Pad and system board Replacement Procedures for instructions on how to disassemble the computer and then perform the following checks If any of the connections are loose reconnect firmly If any of the connections is damaged or there is still an error go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 Touch Pad replacement check The Touch Pad unit or FPC may be defective or damaged Chapter 6 9 Speaker Troubleshooting START ici Perform audio source test Procedure 1 Y Speakers are not Do all sources have mA gt faulty Continue same problem troubleshooting A see Figure 2 1 Yes v Perform earphone test Procedure 2 Do earphones function corr
46. off when the lid is closed 2 1 4 System status indicators Please refer to Keyboard BIOS specification 3 Core BIOS Features 3 1 Multi Boot The notebook can support Multi Boot for selecting the boot sequence of Hard Drive Removable Devices CD ROM DVD Drive and Network in Setup 3 2 Quiet Boot Quiet Boot replaces the customary technical messages during POST with a more visually pleasing and comfortable display OEM screen During POST right after the initialization of VGA The notebook displays an illustration called the OEM screen during system boot instead of the traditional POST screen that displays the normal diagnostic messages The OEM screen stays up until just before the operating system loads unless lt Esc gt have no function on POST Pressing lt F2 gt to enter Setup Pressing lt F12 gt to enter Boot Menu Whenever POST detects a non terminal error it switches to the POST screen near the end of POST just prior to prompting for a password If the BIOS or an option ROM request keyboard input the system switches over to the POST screen with prompts for entering the information POST continues from there with the regular POST screen 3 3 Boot Block The Flash ROM used in many systems today offer the customer the advantage of electronically reprogramming the BIOS without physically replacing the BIOS ROM This advantage however does create a possible hazard power failures or fluctuations that occur during
47. orea K 60950 4 9 ENVIRONMENT STANDARD 4 9 1 RoHS Directive 2002 95 EC 4 9 2 WEEE Directive 2002 96 EC Waste electrical and electronic equipment APD following WEEE Directive Article 4 amp 6 amp 10 4 10 MECHANICAL SECTION 4 10 1 Weight 330g typical 4 10 2 Dimension Refer to mechanical drawing for the details Chapter 5 Disassembly Guide 1 Disassembling the Base Unit These are the directions for disassembling the base unit You will need a 5 5mm Nut Driver a medium size Philips screwdriver These directions are to disassemble the complete unit and are cross referenced to Chapter 7 for the replacement of component parts Before disassembly make sure the notebook is powered off 1 1 upper and lower disassemble 1 1 1 To remove the battery pack from the battery bay follow the steps below Turn the notebook upside down Slide the battery lock to unlock the battery pack Slide the battery release latch in the direction of the arrow gently pry the battery pack from its housing NOTE Always start laptop disassembly by removing the battery pack first 1 1 2 Removing the thermal Door Follow the steps below to remove the thermal door Turn the notebook upside down Remove the 4 screws securing the bottom cover 1 1 3 Disassemble ODD Module Release and take off 1 screw on bottom cover as below then use screw drive push the ODD bracket along ODD direction 1 1 4 Disassemble HDD modul
48. oting procedure is followed step by step it can efficiently isolate the problem and the problem can be solved easily 1 1 PERFORM VISUAL INSPECTION Check the following Power cords are properly connected and secured Power supply is adequate for operation There are no obvious shorts or opens There are no obviously burned or heated components All components appear normal 1 2 Troubleshooting Flowchart Use the flowchart in Figure 6 1 as a guide for determining which troubleshooting procedures to execute Before going through the flowchart steps verify the following s Ask the user if a password is registered and if it is ask him or her to enter the password s Verify with the customer that Win7 is installed on the hard disk Operating systems that were not preinstalled by Compal can cause the computer to malfunction s Make sure all optional equipment is removed from the computer s Make sure the floppy disk drive is empty START Connect the AC adapter to the DC IN socket pi Be Perform the Power Supply lahe DC IN LED on gt No gt Troubleshooting procedures in n er section 6 2 Yes TT a Perform the Power Supply _ IstheBatteryLEDon _ Troubleshooting procedures in a ET section 6 2 vh Turn the Power switch on Yes _ i the Power On LED on Perform the Power Supply No Troubleshooting procedures in e section 6 2 ni Y
49. protected to latch off at over voltage condition maximum value can t be over 27V That might be return to normal state by AC reset 3 3 2 3 Over Current Protection The adaptor shall be auto recovery at over current condition OCP must be more than 4 1A 3 3 2 4 Over Temperature Protection No deformation and no discoloration on case and will be shut down The case temperature lt 95Deg C That will be return to normal state by ac reset 3 4 ENVIRONMENT SECTION 3 4 1 Operating Temperature 0 C to 40 C 3 4 2 Operating Humidity 8 to 90 RH 3 4 3 Storage Temperature 20 C to 85 C 3 4 4 Storage Humidity 5 to 90 RH 3 5 RELIABILITY 3 5 1 MTBF MTBF Mean Time Between Failures Calculation The calculated MTBF shall be 100 000 hours of continuous operation at 25 C maximum load and normal voltage 3 5 2 Vibration 3 5 2 1 Non Operating Acceleration 2 09G Frequency 5 500Hz Vibration duration 20 minutes Force Direction at X Y Z 3 5 2 2 Operating 3 5 3 Drop 3 5 3 1 Non Operating 1 Operating Reliability Testing Six Drops is subject to six impacts that result from six surfaces of the sample being dropped onto a horizontal surface Horizontal Surface Consists of The Concrete Floor 2 Sample weight 214 g 3 Drop height 90 cm 3 5 3 2 Operating 1 Operating Reliability Testing Six Drops is subject to six impacts that result from six surfaces of the sample being dropped onto a hor
50. r Sec 9 4 is defined to indicate the machine is shipped with Windows or non Windows OS The flag is programmed in the factory and BIOS needs to read this flag when populating OEM string ACPI SLIC table If the flag indicates the machine is shipped with non Windows OS BIOS will not load Windows marker structure in ACPI SLIC table KMS Activation support To support the KMS activation the SLIC table should be removed from the ACPI table To support multi customer BIOS should remove the SLIC table as default and populate the SLIC table if customer enter the OEM ID OEM table ID and OS_SKU in the EEPROM The customer should create customized BIOS with SLP2 0 2 1 market and public key at the same time to active Vista Window 7 Please refer to the How to update OEM SLP for the detail instruction of customized BIOS creation 9 8 Multi Customer Logo Support To support Multi customer Logo BIOS will merge dummy OEM logo in BIOS as default and customer should create customized BIOS with OEM Logo Please refer to the How to update OEM Logo for the detail instruction of customized BIOS creation 10 System Setup 10 1 Invoking setup The setup function can be invoked by pressing F2 During setup all Fn function keys and power saving functions are disabled The Secure Boot Menu can be invoked by pressing F3 10 2 Setup screens 10 2 1 Main Menu InsydeH20 Setup Utility Main Advanced Security Boot Exit System Tim
51. re the DC IN and Battery LEDs lit r Yes No i Replace adaptor battery Procedure 2 c Check power supply connections Procedure 3 l Can you turn the computer on No Run diagnostic program bi Procedure 4 Are the internal power connections secure Perform internal connection No check Procedure 5 Replace system board we END Figure 6 2 Power Supply Troubleshooting Process The power supply controls many functions and components To determine if the power supply is functioning properly start with Procedure 1 and continue with the other Procedures as instructed The flowchart in Figure 6 2 gives a summary of the process The procedures described in this section are s Procedure 1 Power status check s Procedure 2 Adaptor battery replacement s Procedure 3 Power supply connection check s Procedure 4 Diagnostic check s Procedure 5 Internal connection check Procedure 1 Power Status Check The following LEDs indicate the power supply status Battery LED The power supply controller displays the power supply status through the Battery and the POWER LEDs as listed in the tables below Table 2 1 Battery LED Battery State _ LEDcolors Definition Charging Amber solid on Battery charging with AC blue solid on Battery fully charged by AC color off Battery abnormal stop charging with AC Bad cell
52. reless LAN unit or system board may each be the source of a wireless LAN fault Any of these components may be damaged To determine if the Computers wireless LAN system is functioning properly perform the following procedures Figure 6 13 outlines the process Start with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as instructed Procedure 1 Diagnostic test Procedure 2 Connector and replacement check Procedure 1 Diagnostic test Run the Diagnostic Program which will automatically execute the wireless LAN test Refer to Chapter 3 Tests and Diagnostics for more information on the program If an error is located go to Procedure 2 If an error is not located the wireless LAN system is functioning properly Check 1 Make sure the wireless select switch installed in your installed programs Check 2 press keyboard Fn F2 make sure wireless is enable If the program persist go to Procedure Procedure 2 Connector and replacement check The wireless LAN antenna wireless LAN unit or system board may be disconnected or damaged Disassemble the computer following the steps described in Chapter 4 Replacement Procedures and perform the following checks Check 1 Make sure that the wireless LAN antenna is firmly connected to the wireless LAN unit refer to Chapter 4 for instructions and that the wireless LAN unit is securely slotted into the system board If the problem persists go to Check 2 Check 2 Check that the wirele
53. ss communication switch is turned to On then make sure that the wireless communication LED on the front panel is lit If the LED is lit but the wireless LAN function is still faulty the antenna may be damaged Replace with a new antenna following the steps in Chapter 4 Replacement Procedures If the problem persists or if the wireless LAN LED is not lit when the wireless communication switch is turned to On go to Check 3 Check 3 The wireless LAN unit may be damaged Replace it with a new one following the instructions in Chapter 4 If the problem still exists perform Check 4 Check 4 The system board may be damaged Replace it with a new one following the instructions in Chapter 12 Camera function Troubleshooting START Perform camera function procedure1 Camera Does camera display NG no gt module is not faulty yes Perform camera module replacement check procudure 2 Replace system board Figure 6 12 camera trouble shooting process This section describes how to determine if the computer s camera is functioning properly Figure 6 12 outlines the process Perform the steps below starting with Procedure 1 and continue with the other procedures as required Procedure 1 Camera connection check Procedure 2 blue tooth replacement check Procedure 1 Camera connection check The Camera is connected by the Camera cable to t
54. sume BIOS must hands off the control to the operating system within the following time limits Required S3 gt S0 2seconds Measured using the Microsoft VTS Velocity tool In addition total resume time from S3 must be completed within 5 seconds 6 4 Power State Transition Diagram The state transition diagram in ACPI mode is as follows From State Leave By Condition Enter State s3 Power Button SO Internal Keyboard RTC Alarm On board LAN WOL 1 Battery Critical Hibernation trip point reached 2 The timer timeout after the inactivity of selected timer in power scheme System Hibernate reaches the setting 2 Power Button On board LAN Only in AC mode RTC Alarm Only in AC mode Power Button On board LAN Only in AC mode RTC Alarm Only in AC mode Press Lid switch Sleep Button Fn F2 S3 Power Button depends on ACPI OS setting User selects the Standby Option in the Windows Shut Down menu ACPI OS timer expired Critical Low battery depends on ACPI OS setting Press Lid switch Sleep Button Fn F2 S4 Power Button depends on ACPI OS setting 10 User selects the Hibernate Option in the Windows Shut Down menu Critical Low battery depends on ACPI OS setting Press Lid switch Power Button depends on ACPI OS setting The Power Button is pressed for 4 seconds Power Button Override User sele
55. tem Components Summary Dimension 344 x 237 5 x 19 7mm Front amp 33 3mm Rear Weight 2 2 Kg CPU Intel Sandy Bridge Dual Core 1 7G 1 8G 1 9G 2 2G 2 3G 2 4G Chipset HM70 SupportDDR3 1333MHz 1G 2G 4G Memory Support 2 So DIMMS up to Max 8GB Optical Device Option Dummy ODD Fixed 12 7mm height SATA ODD DVD Super Multi DVD RAM R RW R RW 8X write Support Double Layer Recording is required High Definition Disc 2 5 9 5mm SATA HDD SATA HDD 250G 320G 500G 5400 7200rpm HDD 2 5 7 0mm SATA HDD 320G 500G 5400rpm 250G 320G 500G 5400 7200rpm Display 14 5 2mm 16 9 LED backlight LCD HD 1366 x 768 Graphics Chip No 10 Audio HD Audio Speakers 2 1 5W Microphone in and Headphone out Communication No modem No PCI Express No WWAN LAN 10 100 Option 10 100 1000 Giga LAN WLAN only or W L BT Combo Option WLAN AMP enabled for BT3 0 compatible Keyboard NAW20 chocolate cap 86 87 keys support with 101 102 key emulation without stick point Windows key Application key Standard pitch 2 5mm travel length Multi Language support Pointing Device Normal Track Pad with up down scroll zone and two buttons Support Multi finger feature Media Slot 3 in 1 flash card reader SD MMC MS I O ports USB2 0 x 2 USB3 0 x 1 RJ45 x 1 VGA port x 1 HDMI x 1 3 in 1 flash card reader x 1 Microphone in x 1 Headphone out x 1 Camera Option 0 3M 1 3M P
56. tion WLAN AMP enabled for BT3 0 compatible e Note For Motorola Bluetooth please experience the BT function by Motorola s user friendly GUI you can refer to Motorola BT help file from Taskbar gt Bluetooth icon gt Right Click on BT icon gt My Bluetooth Settings gt Help 1 12 Pointing Device e Normal Track Pad with up down scroll zone and two buttons e Support Multi finger feature 1 13 Media Slot e 3 in 1 flash card reader SD MMC MS 1 14 I O Ports e USB2 0 x 2 For HM70 USB2 0 x 3 For HM75 e USB3 0 x 1 For HM70 e RJ45x 1 e VGA port x 1 s HDMIx1 e 3 in 1 flash card reader x 1 e Microphone in x 1 e Headphone out x 1 1 15 Microphone e Analog Type Internal Microphone 1 16 TV tuner e NO 1 17 System Status Indicators e 1 Caps Lock White e 1 Power Button LED White e 1 LED for IDE HDD activity Blue e 1 LED for System status Power On Suspend Blue e 1 LED for Battery status Charging Full L1 L2 Blue Amber e 1 LED for Blue tooth Wireless Card Amber 1 18 Control Button e Hot Key e Power button support software off 4 sec x 1 e Magnetic lid switch control for system standby wakeup or suspend resume 1 19 User Keys e No 1 20 AC Adapter e Universal AC adapter e 65W with 19V DC 3 pin 240V AC cable 1 21 Battery e 6cell e Li On 18650 type 4400mAh 4500mAh 5100mAh 5200mAh e Life Cycle 70 Design Capacity after 300 Cycles in 25degreeC 1 22 Software e Insyde B
57. to enable 1 5vp output SUSP I 0 3 3V Low Active system use this signal to enable 1 8vsp VCCSA VCCP SUSP I 0 3 3V High Active systems use this signal to enable 0 75vsp LDO VR_ON O 0 3 3V High Active system use this signal to enable cpu_core VS O 0 3 3V When Adapter plug in high active when battery only low active use this signal to power on SMB_EC_CK1 O 0 3 3V High Active system detector battery signal SMB_EC_DA1 O 0 3 3V High Active system detector battery signal BATT_TEMP O 0 3 3V High Active system detector battery signal Battery Socket Socket CONN 200275MR009G180ZR 9P SUYIN TBD Pin1 Pin2 GND Pin3 SMC SMBUS Clock pin Pin4 SMD SMBUS Data pin Pin5 TS Battery temperature detector pin Pine B I Enable LI ION battery output connect a 1K resistor to GND in system Pin7 ID Floating Pin8 Pin9 BATT Battery positive power pin 2 Battery Specification 2 1 EE information 6 cell 6cell 6 cell 6cell Battery Design 4400 4500 5100 5200 Capacity mAH Battery Configuration 3S2P 3S2P 3S2P 3S2P Battery Nominal 10 8 10 8 11 1 11 1 Voltage V Single Cell Chemistry Li ion Li ion Li ion Li ion Single Cell Type 18650 18650 18650 18650 Single Cell 2200 2250 2550 2600 Capacity mAH Dumb Smart Battery Smart Battery Smart Battery Smart Battery Smart Battery SMBus ver SMBus ver SMBus ver SMBus ver
58. tructions on how to disassemble the computer and then perform the following checks If any of the connections are loose reconnect firmly If any of the connections is damaged or there is still an error go to Procedure 2 Procedure 2 blue tooth replacement check The blue tooth device or cable may be defective or damaged
59. updating the Flash ROM can damage the BIOS code making the system unbootable To prevent this possible hazard many Flash ROM include a special non volatile region that can never be erased This region called the boot block contains a fail safe recovery routine If the boot block finds corrupted BIOS it prompts the end user to insert a diskette from which it loads several files that replace the corrupted BIOS on the Flash ROM with an uncorrupted one 4 Thermal management Please refer to Keyboard BIOS specification 5 Power Management for ACPI mode 5 1 Introduction The notebook supports ACPI The system will dynamically switch to ACPI mode for configuration and power management when an ACPI OS is loaded When ACPI is not loaded and enabled the power management function will be disabled 5 2 System Time outs If the system is running in ACPI mode system Time outs is handled by the operating system BIOS time outs are disabled System time outs are set using the control panel power applet 5 3 System Power Management The overall system can be in one of the system power states as described below ACPI mode Power Management Mech Off G3 All devices in the system are turned off completely Soft Off G2 S5 OS initiated shutdown All devices in the system are turned off completely Working GO SO Individual devices such as the CPU and hard disk may be power managed in this state S3 Sleeping State CPU set power down
60. while holding down lt Fn B gt key After POST release lt Fn B gt key The system should boot from floppy and perform crisis recovery action 8 5 VGA Support This section describes the expected behavior when a video monitor is connected to the VGA port on the notebook The feature needs VGA driver support The BIOS will use both the RGB and pin 11 methods to determine the presence of an external VGA monitor Video modes supported on the secondary display path need VGA driver support Supported video modes and timings please refer to the technical reference of VGA vendor In particular text mode and standard VGA modes are not supported 8 6 Brightness table This section describes the LCD Brightness control The keyboard Fn F4 and Fn F5 keys the AC DC state and the brightness slide bar in Windows Vista Mobility Center control the LCD brightness 13A There shall be 11 levels of distinct brightness Level 11 Maximum Brightness possible Level 1 Minimum brightness without flickering 10 nits recommended depending on inverter stability type and display uniformity One setting level should be approximately 55 60 nits for Mobile Mark 2002 test 8 7 Boot Display Algorithm This section describes the POST boot up display device with multi display device attached Only support Local Flat Panel display during POST when LFP attached the external display device Include VGA DVI HDMI and DP will not display until entering th
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