CoreLink Systems

Dead Laptop Repair

Dead Laptop Repair

No power, no lights, no boot, structured diagnosis to bring your laptop back to life.

Understanding a Dead Laptop

A laptop that shows absolutely no sign of life, no LED indicators, no fan spin, no screen backlight, is one of the most alarming situations for any owner, and one of the most commonly misdiagnosed. Many owners assume the motherboard is entirely finished, but in our experience the vast majority of dead laptops have a single identifiable fault: a failed charging circuit, a blown power IC, a faulty DC jack, or a battery that has failed in a way that prevents the system from powering on at all.

The key to fixing a dead laptop is not guessing, it is methodically ruling components in and out until the true point of failure is found. That is the process we follow on every dead-laptop case that comes into our lab.

Our Diagnostic Process for Dead Laptops

Step 1: Power Source Verification

We confirm the charger itself is delivering correct voltage and current, and that the DC jack and its connection to the motherboard are intact. A surprising number of dead laptop cases turn out to be a failed charger or a cracked DC jack solder joint rather than a deeper board fault.

Step 2: Battery Isolation Test

We test the laptop on AC power alone, with the battery removed, to determine whether a faulty battery is preventing the system from powering on.

Step 3: Power Rail Tracing

Using a bench power supply and multimeter, we trace the standby and main power rails from the DC input through to the CPU and chipset, identifying any shorts to ground.

Step 4: Component-Level Inspection

Under a digital microscope, we inspect the power delivery components for visible damage, discolouration, or cracked solder joints that a multimeter alone might not catch.

Step 5: Targeted Repair

Once the exact failed component is identified, we replace or repair it directly, rather than replacing the entire board, keeping cost and turnaround time down.

Common Causes of a Dead Laptop

  • Failed charging IC or power management chip
  • Cracked or broken DC jack solder joints
  • Short-circuited components from a power surge
  • Liquid spill causing corrosion on the power circuit
  • Completely failed battery pulling down the power rail
  • Physical damage from a drop affecting board connections

What to Do If Your Laptop Will Not Turn On

Avoid repeatedly pressing the power button or leaving the charger connected for extended periods. Do not attempt to open the laptop yourself. Note down anything unusual that happened just before it stopped working and bring the device in for a free diagnosis.

Turnaround Time

Most dead-laptop faults are identified within a few hours of diagnostic testing, and repairs are typically completed within 24 to 48 hours once the fault is confirmed and the quote is approved.

Signs You Need This Service

Laptop showing zero signs of life?

Scroll to Top