all cleaned up! i had to remove all those parts, add flux and reheat all the pads, scrub with IPA, and then put everything back in place. and replace the caps, of course.
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all cleaned up! i had to remove all those parts, add flux and reheat all the pads, scrub with IPA, and then put everything back in place. and replace the caps, of course. 99 comments
last night i reverse engineered it. the design is simple so it wasn't too hard. the files are here: https://github.com/schlae/Thinkpad700CPower it also explains the mystery "INPUT SIGNAL" pin on the old 4-pin IBM Thinkpad power connector. this pin simply increases the output current limit when it is pulled low by the laptop. it's because the power brick is also the battery charger, and when the laptop is turned on, you have to increase the current to compensate. @tubetime Please don't step on those! Lego is bad enough already @tubetime Haha, that was actually my first thought when you started this thread. "Those are just dressed up card-edge connectors." Nice job. @tubetime All this is making me miss my old Thinkpad 701 Butterfly. Damn that keyboard design was so neat. @tubetime for a second there I forgot these use the aptly-nicknamed "ThinkPad 700 drive". What a cursed thing it was, DBA-ESDI 2.5". @tubetime My guess would be acquisitions and not caring about all the product lines of the acquired company. Good news is now that TE owns all connector manufacturers*, they won't have this excuse going forward. (*slight exaggeration) I started archiving catalogs from connector companies just because of that problem. @tubetime You're taking good care of the capacitors they're growing in size! 😆 |
it lights up and stays lit, so i'll call that a win. (yes, the hard drive still isn't working, so it's not booting.)