Installer Steam
log på
|
sprog
简体中文 (forenklet kinesisk)
繁體中文 (traditionelt kinesisk)
日本語 (japansk)
한국어 (koreansk)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bulgarsk)
Čeština (tjekkisk)
Deutsch (tysk)
English (engelsk)
Español – España (spansk – Spanien)
Español – Latinoamérica (spansk – Latinamerika)
Ελληνικά (græsk)
Français (fransk)
Italiano (italiensk)
Bahasa indonesia (indonesisk)
Magyar (ungarsk)
Nederlands (hollandsk)
Norsk
Polski (polsk)
Português (portugisisk – Portugal)
Português – Brasil (portugisisk – Brasilien)
Română (rumænsk)
Русский (russisk)
Suomi (finsk)
Svenska (svensk)
Türkçe (tyrkisk)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamesisk)
Українська (ukrainsk)
Rapporter et oversættelsesproblem
Also whenever you put a laptop back together you must check everything to be sure you didn't miss plugging anything back where it goes and that each connection is solid. And that during reassembly, that no cables inside get sharply bent or crimped.
And double check that once back together, that all ports correctly line up to the openings on the chassis as flush as possible.
Not sure why you'd take a gamble on such an old laptop thag isn't going to be able to run modern games.
Cmos battery in laptop are a coin battery wrapped in heat-shrink, connected via a 2 wire cable. Some might be installed into a small socket, similar to what we always see on desktop motherboards.
If it dropped below approx 2.9-2.95 volts, it needs replacing. You can look up your laptop model on ebay and get replacement parts such as the battery. So that it comes with the shrink wrap and wiring already on it. Battery from another laptop could work, as long as you are able to get it to plug into your laptops motherboard
get a 100 pack next time
https://www.amazon.com/OEMTOOLS-25181-Razor-Blades-Pack/dp/B000CMFJZ2
ot: cmos battery just saves settings when not powered by batt or brick
most on newer laptops are soldered to the board
if you know the laptops model you can try looking for a replacement or at a teardown vid
but its a laptop, default settings should be fine 99% of the time anyway
may just need to hit a key to continue on boot
it needs a semi-full charged batt or ac adapter to run
plug in the ac adapter, give it a minute to figure out it has no batt then try it
Under load the CMOS battery will experience a voltage drop over a resistive load. If you disconnect the CMOS battery and it reads 3V+ your fine.
https://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Razer+Blade+14+(2013)+Teardown/22591
Yuck soldered on RAM piece of crap.
I have had instances where a dead CMOS battery prevented booting.
Cmos battery is usually required to boot the system every since Intel 2nd Gen stuff came out.