Hello everyone,
I have been watching EEVBlog on YouTube for years now and always enjoyed the content, even though I really don't understand much about electronics. I've always had a fascination with electronics, but I really lack the knowledge. The only work I've done was replace the through-hole capacitors in my flat screen TV to get it working again.
I have a laptop which developed a short to ground fault about a year ago. I never bothered looking into it because I thought it would be too much for me take on, but I got curious to see if I could do anything. After many YouTube videos and testing with a multimeter later, I miraculously discovered the cause. It was a defective surface mount capacitor. I removed the capacitor from the circuit and now the laptop works again! It find it crazy that such a tiny, inconspicuous component can be responsible for preventing an entire device from operating.
I feel so proud of myself for finding the issue and seeing the computer boot again, but I have to wonder, what exactly was this component doing? I don't see any anything wrong with the computer now that the part removed. Do I even need to bother replacing it?
The computer is a Dell Latitude e7440 laptop and the failing component was the "PC10" capacitor which was placed between GND and +DC_IN_SS
If it turns out that I have to replace it, could I please get some help in locating a suitable replacement to order online?
Thank you all for listening.