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help needed after laptop exploded when using hdmi cable

Discuss help needed after laptop exploded when using hdmi cable in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

G

g1190

hi,

thanks in advance to any help you can offer.

recently, for the first time, i attempted to watch a film through my laptop connected to my television. i connected my latop to my sony flatscreen telly with an hdmi cable. the tv was plugged in and on; the latop was on but NOT with its ac adapter plugged in. no problems here. i then decided to connect the latop to its ac adapter and there was a flash, bang and smell of burning. i turned off the computer immediately. it turned out the motherboard was fried. the tv was fine, as was the hdmi cable. but what im searching for is the answer to why this happened. where could the fault have been, and in which appliance?

thanks very much

dave
 
It shouldn't matter which order you plug them in - I don't get that at all. The only thing I can think is that if there is a voltage on the earth of the tv connectors (which there sometimes is on non class I TV's, etc.) and the shield of the hdmi connector maybe touched the data pins of the socket and thus applied the voltage to them. The design of the hdmi socket makes this unlikely though. Daz

the power should be separate for the video output on the device.

its likely the transformer in the laptop failed.

the charger charges at say 15-20v but things like usb devices run on 5v and cpu's run on 12v.


it wouldn't have made a difference if it was plugged in or not, it still would have gone bang.

probably a faulty leed
 
the power should be separate for the video output on the device.

its likely the transformer in the laptop failed.

the charger charges at say 15-20v but things like usb devices run on 5v and cpu's run on 12v.


it wouldn't have made a difference if it was plugged in or not, it still would have gone bang.

probably a faulty leed

I know the voltages on USB ports are 5V and chargers are generally around 19V (modern CPU's don't generally run on 12V though). The point I was making is that the shielding around the connectors of some pieces of audio/video equipment is often floating at a highish voltage, rather than being truly earthed. Try it, you might be surprised. Daz
 

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