Aspire 5 V3-575T Laptop - Worth fixing? Who's got the troubleshooting solution for me?

BigDаvе
BigDаvе Member Posts: 2 New User
edited July 2023 in Aspire Laptops

My V3-575T has been an absolute workhorse for me and I really hate to give up on it.

One morning, I went to open it up & there was no power. I tried another power supply with no luck. I'm pretty tech savvy but without power, I can't troubleshoot it.

I think it may have gotten hot but I can't tell what the problem is.

Who's got the troubleshooting solution for me?

Thanks!


[Edited the thread to add model name to the title and to add issue detail]

Best Answer

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,027 Trailblazer
    edited July 2023 Answer ✓

    As you know power on issues could be from numerous sources that have issues inside the laptop, either the battery has expired, or the charger is faulty, or it could be in the primary or secondary power stages of the 19V and 3.3V circuitries that need to be checked and analyzed by yourself if you have the tools and the experience or by a technician.

    Try and do a hard reset by taking the battery out, disconnect the RTC/bios battery (next to the ram slots) and then use a paper clip or tweezers to short its +&- pins so that you reset the laptops CMOS also, and take all ram modules out, leave all components disconnected for 15min and reconnect everything and only use 1x ram module if you have 2x installed, see if the laptop turn on and boots, as a hard reset unfreezes the super IO, chipset and/or the bios chips and rests the laptop.

    If the above doesn't work then try and boot the laptop on the adaptor only, also check the charger if its working and/or the laptop is not tripping the charger/adaptor fuse to off whenever its plugged into the laptop DC port, as that is a sign that your laptop has internal issues.

Answers

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,027 Trailblazer
    edited July 2023 Answer ✓

    As you know power on issues could be from numerous sources that have issues inside the laptop, either the battery has expired, or the charger is faulty, or it could be in the primary or secondary power stages of the 19V and 3.3V circuitries that need to be checked and analyzed by yourself if you have the tools and the experience or by a technician.

    Try and do a hard reset by taking the battery out, disconnect the RTC/bios battery (next to the ram slots) and then use a paper clip or tweezers to short its +&- pins so that you reset the laptops CMOS also, and take all ram modules out, leave all components disconnected for 15min and reconnect everything and only use 1x ram module if you have 2x installed, see if the laptop turn on and boots, as a hard reset unfreezes the super IO, chipset and/or the bios chips and rests the laptop.

    If the above doesn't work then try and boot the laptop on the adaptor only, also check the charger if its working and/or the laptop is not tripping the charger/adaptor fuse to off whenever its plugged into the laptop DC port, as that is a sign that your laptop has internal issues.

  • BigDаvе
    BigDаvе Member Posts: 2 New User

    Thanks, Steven!

    Thank you for your quick reply AND your solution to my problem.

    Thanks to you, I'm replying to this from my Aspire.

    I must've done something wrong the first time, as I only got power & no display.

    I followed your instructions for the hard reset to the letter, paying closer attention to the time and it fired right up!

    You're the best!

  • StevenGen
    StevenGen ACE Posts: 12,027 Trailblazer
    edited July 2023

    Glad to help you out BigDаvе as I've got an earlier Aspire V3-571G that I'm using as my eManual virtualization laptop and as a spare laptop and my V3 laptop fires up every time with Win-10 Pro and has been bullet proof for over a decade, these laptops are great old school laptops, and have it all over these new laptops that don't come close or advanced much as far as reliability and maintenance.