crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0
crwdns2918538:0crwdne2918538:0

crwdns2934243:0crwdne2934243:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable.[br]
***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). The LG LCD is the one you want, although the BOE/AUO LCDs aren't bad either if you get it. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with? Yeah, no.''***
I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage. The issue is the long term effects, especially with more corrosive liquid. If it want such a sneaky bastard that comes fatal failures when left to sit for who knows how long before it comes back to bite you (especially “mystery” spills, though I suspect coffee), I'd have tried if it wasn't for the damage done and potential hidden issues like UHS damage, especially since the ZIF sockets were affected too - including the trackpad which controls the keyboard and trackpad.[br]
***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit is a total loss since it's so suspect. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it.[br]
-***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the laptop a bit before I put money towards it? I found so many issues I ducked and ran.''***
+***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the laptop a bit before I put money towards it? I found a serious issue which affected multiple areas of the motherboard to the point I ducked and ran.''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). The LG LCD is the one you want, although the BOE/AUO LCDs aren't bad either if you get it. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with? Yeah, no.''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable.[br]
+***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). The LG LCD is the one you want, although the BOE/AUO LCDs aren't bad either if you get it. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with? Yeah, no.''***
-I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage. The issue is the long term effects, especially with more corrosive liquid. If it want such a sneaky bastard that comes fatal failures when left to sit for who knows how long before it comes back to bite you (especially “mystery” spills, though I suspect coffee), I'd have tried if it wasn't for the damage done and potential hidden issues like UHS damage, especially since the ZIF sockets were affected too - including the trackpad which controls the keyboard and trackpad. ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit is a total loss since it's so suspect. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
+I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage. The issue is the long term effects, especially with more corrosive liquid. If it want such a sneaky bastard that comes fatal failures when left to sit for who knows how long before it comes back to bite you (especially “mystery” spills, though I suspect coffee), I'd have tried if it wasn't for the damage done and potential hidden issues like UHS damage, especially since the ZIF sockets were affected too - including the trackpad which controls the keyboard and trackpad.[br]
+***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit is a total loss since it's so suspect. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
-Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***
+Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it.[br]
+***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the laptop a bit before I put money towards it? I found so many issues I ducked and ran.''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). The LG LCD is the one you want, although the BOE/AUO LCDs aren't bad either if you get it. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with? Yeah, no.''***
-I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
+I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage. The issue is the long term effects, especially with more corrosive liquid. If it want such a sneaky bastard that comes fatal failures when left to sit for who knows how long before it comes back to bite you (especially “mystery” spills, though I suspect coffee), I'd have tried if it wasn't for the damage done and potential hidden issues like UHS damage, especially since the ZIF sockets were affected too - including the trackpad which controls the keyboard and trackpad. ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit is a total loss since it's so suspect. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit for anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (Full HD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (FHD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed it as an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LGD0557 (Full HD IPS, LG) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss knowing what I replaced it with?''***
I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
-Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***
+Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards it?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when we it's used where I can chance, but my time is also worth more then hoping it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
+Yes I've been here before. I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage and a bad past. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues I'd probably need a new unit being needed anyway and make sure nothing is going to kill the new machine - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when it's used where I can chance it, but my time is also worth more then having to hope it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement unit has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
-I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can also be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad ZIF socket (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it.''***
+I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can literally be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and corroded the socket, but also damaged the cables (USH and trackpad). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it. If I get a decent amount of RAM and can free up a low value SSD I may fix it, but otherwise it's not a machine I'd put money into.''***
-Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***
+Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed to the point it needs to be replaced and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - yes the risk is low when used where I can chance or, but my time is also worth more then hoping it's reliable. ***''However, the replacement I got has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I found a 1:1 unit without a bad past, but the seller listed an 8250U unit which has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
+I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - yes the risk of a sudden issue I can't work around is low when we it's used where I can chance, but my time is also worth more then hoping it's reliable. ***''That said, the replacement has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I at least found a 1:1 unit, but the seller listed an 8250U unit when it really has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
-I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it. It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked more closely at the *damaged area*. It also got to the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad ZIF socket (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard.''***
+I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it, especially when you have to guess what it was (I suspected coffee, but it can also be anything). It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked around the *damaged area*. It also got into the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad ZIF socket (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, and the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard the unit was basically a total loss. I might try one day, but I'm not buying parts for it.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934245:0crwdne2934245:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

-I’ve been unknowingly sold laptops with hidden water damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt then and there to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - my time is worth more then hoping a bad past doesn’t come back later. ***''However, the good news is the replacement I got has no such an issue, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I found a 1:1 unit without the bad past, but the seller listed an 8350U unit as an 8250U system - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panels. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
+I’ve unknowingly purchased laptops with hidden liquid damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - yes the risk is low when used where I can chance or, but my time is also worth more then hoping it's reliable. ***''However, the replacement I got has no such issues, and was incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I found a 1:1 unit without a bad past, but the seller listed an 8250U unit which has an 8350U - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panel. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***
-I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back when you least expect it. It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked closely at the *area* and it also infested the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the messed up history, liquid damage, the fact I’d need to replace the USH and trackpad cable, as well as potentially the USH (and bear in mind, the USH may still never, ever work again) do you think I spent much more time on it?''***
+I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back to bite when you least expect it. It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked more closely at the *damaged area*. It also got to the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad ZIF socket (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the liquid damage and messed up history, the fact I may need to replace the USH PCB (cables have to be, no way around that). Oh, and there may be permanent damage that needs repair or a replacement motherboard.''***
Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open

crwdns2934241:0crwdne2934241:0 Nick

crwdns2934249:0crwdne2934249:0:

I’ve been unknowingly sold laptops with hidden water damage. Once I seen that and how severe it was before cleaning, I abandoned the rebuild attempt then and there to avoid any future issues which may lead to a new unit being needed anyway - my time is worth more then hoping a bad past doesn’t come back later. ***''However, the good news is the replacement I got has no such an issue, and was  incorrectly advertised with a lesser CPU then it actually has :-). I thought I found a 1:1 unit without the bad past, but the seller listed an 8350U unit as an 8250U system - SCORE! I also checked out the screen it has - LG LGD0557 (Full HD IPS) - double score :-). That screen is top notch compared to the BOE/AUO panels. How sad do you think I am the bad unit is a total loss?''***

I mention this as a prime example of how I got burned. Yes, I can fix water damage, but the issue is it’s a sneaky bastard that comes back when you least expect it. It’s mostly isolated to the headphone jack area, but I looked closely at the *area* and it also infested the USH ZIF socket and damaged the cable, as well as the trackpad (again, cable damaged). ***''Between the messed up history, liquid damage, the fact I’d need to replace the USH and trackpad cable, as well as potentially the USH (and bear in mind, the USH may still never, ever work again) do you think I spent much more time on it?''***

Sadly, you got burned the same way :(. Unless you can source a new board or know someone who can replace the LCD connector, you’re screwed since you bought the computer “as-is”. See if you can find a cheap motherboard, or try your hand at microsoldering since you have nothing left to lose if the board is potentially trashed and you can’t even find a shop who can take online repairs to do it. ***''Next time, assess the unit before ordering parts so you don’t throw good money after bad - it’ll save you a lot of pain next time. Do you think I regret assessing the bad laptop before I put money towards a money pit?''***

crwdns2915684:0crwdne2915684:0:

open