I am a former professional auto mechanic (Porsche and numerous foreign marques). I am currently a semi-retired computer programmer. My hobbies include motorcycles both riding and wrenching. Home automation. I like to pay it forward to the gear-head community what little I know. Having said that... I will not respond to rhetorical questions or blatant attempts to troll against my contributions. I periodically write articles on a blog about my projects. You may find those here: Timbocephus
One final thought: This is ifixit.com not itellyouhowtouseit.com
Motherboard replacement
I have never dismantled my personal wave radio but after looking at your pics @turnkit I would suggest the following:
Using a razor saw cut the melted portions of the “rivets” off. I recommend wearing gloves while doing that. I suffered many cuts from those nasty things in my youth working with plastic models! Another perhaps easier option is to grind off the melted portions with a dremel or other rotary tool with a small sanding drum or other suitable tool bit. You should be able to reattach with a dab of epoxy over the tops of these when you are finished servicing the innards of the button panel. Ours still works perfectly after nearly 25 years, we rarely use the alarm or even the radio anymore as we are retired. It is a fine clock radio and has always maintained settings and time through all those years of flakey rural electric service outtages.
Fixed dead URL for USB/SATA adapter device acquisition in next to last bullet point under step four above.
Checking if feasible……. from the HP documentation page, which I can hardly believe an five year old link I setup under the device page on ifixit.com STILL WORKS!!!!!
product documentation
From manual above on page 1….
Memory One SODIMM memory module slot Dual-channel memory support DDR3L-1600 MHz Dual Channel support DDR3-1333 MHz support (DDR3L-1600 downgraded to DDR3-1333) Supports up to 4 GB of system RAM in the following configurations: ● 4096 MB total system memory (4096 MB × 1) ● 2048 MB total system memory (2048 MB × 1)
So the answer to your question is there is no benefit/downside unless you are trying to get your device to an inoperable state (I am assuming since I’ve not actually tried).
Thanks for the info. I have added a comment below the first bullet point in next step. Does it just fail silently or does it provide some sort of error message?
Heißluftgebläse … 404
Removed dead link on "8mb” (orange bullet point).
Marvell Avastar 88W8782U link is 404
Apparently content no longer supported by vendor
You are welcome! How about some reputation love? See the big blue button above? Also sorry about dropping the ball on the wiki markup. I have fixed my earlier omission on that front by surrounding the command to cut/paste in the step 3 bullet points by surrounding them with wiki markup tags and removing the useless quotes I had tried earlier.
I looked up the model number of that unit on google and found the dimension for thickness of that drive is 9.5mm so..... no it won't fit.
Sayfa 1 / 2
Sonraki