Can anyone good with computers help me out please?
I have a used gaming laptop (maingear vector model number MG-VCTR001-1660TI) I try charging it and it won't turn on no matter how long i charge it for, I think it's the battery because before this it had an issue where it'd seem charged then immediately die after logging on.
I'm trying to see if I can replace the battery instead of getting a new laptop entirely but when I try looking up the laptops info with "replacement battery", only links to the laptop itself show up and no batteries.
Am I looking up the wrong info?
Can it even be replaced?
If it can, can I use any battery that's compatible and how would I know if it is?
https://www.amazon.com/EFOHANA-L19M4PDC-Replacement-Tongfang-Eluktronics/dp/B0C28F5KV6/
I think this will work, but I would pop it open and check the part number is compatible.
I gotta get a screwdriver but once I do ill confirm if that's the right one, thank you, comrade
Mini sus that it wont work purely from charger. you can check voltage coming from charger as well, as for battery -you open the laptop and search for number(s) on the cells, and then search wherever for that exact number. Alternatively, try searching with keywords repair on youtube, maybe someone put it out there.
The battery has dimensions, voltage, amps and pinout shape/placement (pinout is placement of different connectors from battery to mother board), small lack of amps wont kill you, unless you use full power, but all other ones are completely non-changeable
When it's charging, the light that shows it's charging turns on but it won't power on anymore
Could that be something other than a busted battery?
It should really turn on with the ac plugged in. Does the fan spin up when you power it? Kinda sounds like a motherboard issue to be honest. When you've got it opened up I'd reseat the memory, just in case.
Its unlikely but just very weird, laptops usually work even with removed battery on charger. You sure you haven't spilled something? It could be some short, when you open it up just check for scorch marks and weird smell as well.
Try opening it up to see if the battery itself has a part/model number you can look up