I am attempting to diagnose a non charging HP EliteBook 1030 G3 and have a working one for comparison.
Being an experienced computer technician, this does not make me an electronic technician, so that I would really appreciate some help for the electronic part of diagnosing this laptop.
As a picture is worth a thousand words, I attach one, with annotations of some measured voltages.I also attach three zoomed pictures from the healthy laptop, taken through one ocular of the stereomicroscope.
(I make these pictures copyleft ; feel free to edit/anotate them if it can help.)
I measured different voltages when the power USB-C plug was in each of the two available sockets.
As we can see, on the non charging laptop, when plug is in the left socket (hinges side), the voltage through the condenser located between the two ports is 4.97 VDC instead of 14.92 VDC. (~10V difference)
When the plug is in the socket on the right (battery side), the voltage through the TVS fuse and condenser located on the right is 20 VDC instead of 14.92 VDC. (~5V difference).
The voltages at the pins of the Winbond chip are almost identical for the two boards, but those at the pins of the MXIC chip are very different.
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Additional information (less useful) ---
On the defective laptop, the voltage measured at the battery pins when the battery is disconnected is 0.46V.
(When the battery is connected, it it thus of the battery, around 7.7V.)
On the healthy laptop, the voltage measured at the battery pins is between 8.22V and 8.54V, depending on how much the battery was charged.
The problem initially occured short time after replacement of the USB 3.0 port, which was done carefully.
The laptop was still working again and launched an BIOS / Firmware upgrade without my agreement.
During the BIOS upgrade is a unpgrade of the USB-C firmware. It has possibly be interrupted because this model of laptop show almost no sign of life during the upgrade of its firmware modules (screen remains black ; maybe the almost visible diodes on the power button, or a small orange diode on the keyboard (F11 key?) or at the Caps key are the only sign of life.
So, I cannot totally exlude a firmware corruption problem. However, I suspect an electronic problem first.
The battery itself has been drained, but could be recharged with another laptop and was delivering 8,16V after this.
The laptop has once briefly started (screen remained black, but fans spinning fast), when the battery was at 8.16V at the time when I removed the charging plug. After the fans were spinning really fast during around 1 minute, the voltage delivered by the battery dropped to 7.67V (below expected 7.7V). The defective laptop doesn't start again.
The laptop was also unable to start with an healthy battery.




(I wanted do display the images inline, and with the overview first, but it does not work.)