Personal Computer Hardware Maintenance Manual
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Chapter 1. About this manual
- Chapter 2. Safety information
- Chapter 3. General information
- Chapter 4. General checkout
- Chapter 5. Diagnostics
- Chapter 6. Using the Setup Utility
- Chapter 7. Symptom-to-FRU index
- Chapter 8. Replacing FRUs
- Locations
- Opening the computer cover
- Replacing the battery
- Replacing a memory module
- Replacing the adapter card
- Replacing the front audio and USB assembly
- Replacing the heat sink
- Replacing the microprocessor
- Replacing the system board
- Replacing the system fan
- Replacing the hard disk drive
- Replacing the optical drive
- Replacing the internal speaker
- Completing the FRU replacement
- Chapter 9. FRU lists
- Chapter 10. Additional service information
- Appendix. Notices

v Prevent the part from touching your clothing. Most clothing is insulative and
retains a charge even when you are wearing a wrist strap.
v Use the black side of a grounded work mat to provide a static-free work surface.
The mat is especially useful when handling ESD-sensitive devices.
v Select a grounding system, such as those listed below, to provide protection that
meets the specific service requirement.
Note: The use of a grounding system is desirable but not required to protect
against ESD damage.
– Attach the ESD ground clip to any frame ground, ground braid, or green-wire
ground.
– Use an ESD common ground or reference point when working on a
double-insulated or battery-operated system. You can use coax or
connector-outside shells on these systems.
– Use the round ground-prong of the ac plug on ac-operated computers.
Grounding requirements
Electrical grounding of the computer is required for operator safety and correct
system function. Proper grounding of the electrical outlet can be verified by a
certified electrician.
Safety notices (multi-lingual translations)
The caution and danger safety notices in this section are provided in the following
languages:
v English
v Arabic
v Brazilian/Portuguese
v Chinese (simplified)
v Chinese (traditional)
v French
v German
v Hebrew
v Italian
v Korean
v Spanish
DANGER
Electrical current from power, telephone and communication cables is hazardous.
To avoid a shock hazard:
v Do not connect or disconnect any cables or perform installation, maintenance,
or reconfiguration of this product during an electrical storm.
v Connect all power cords to a properly wired and grounded electrical outlet.
Chapter 2. Safety information 7










