MacBook Pro A1708 Not turning on, PPBUS G3H shorted to ground repair: Difference between revisions
From Repair Wiki
More actions
LetUsRepair (talk | contribs) m (→Solution: Fixed formatting of a link to video) |
LetUsRepair (talk | contribs) m (Replaced placeholder image with image captured today, of a shorted capacitor on an 820-00840 board.) |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
==Problem description== | ==Problem description== | ||
<nowiki>#</nowiki>incomplete | <nowiki>#</nowiki>incomplete | ||
[[File: | [[File:Thermal signature.jpg|alt=Thermal signature|thumb|Example image (Figure 1) -- No image yet. Help expand this page by uploading it!]] | ||
==Symptoms== | ==Symptoms== | ||
Latest revision as of 19:22, 9 March 2025
MacBook Pro A1708 Not turning on, PPBUS G3H shorted to ground repair | |
---|---|
Device | MacBook Pro A1708 |
Affects part(s) | Motherboard |
Needs equipment | multimeter, soldering iron, soldering station, thermal camera |
Difficulty | ◉◉◉◌ Hard |
Type | Soldering |
This article is a stub. You can help Repair Wiki grow by expanding it
Problem description
#incomplete

Symptoms
- sub 20 ohms on PPBUS_G3H
- Not turning on
Solution
Inject 1 V (increase if no reaction), watch for hot spots with thermal cam. Usually it's a bad tantalum cap on the PPBUS_G3H rail.
Example video 1: (Taking 20 V, 0 A. Ethanol used instead of thermal cam with 0.8 V on PPBUS_G3H, resistance between PPBUS_G3H and CPU coil is 3.6 Ω) Example 2: (Taking 20 V, 20 mA. Bad capacitor located via visual inspection)
Read the resistance from PPBUS_G3H to Vcore coils (coils around CPU/GPU) IF those measure UNDER 1 Ω (0.3–0.8) then you most likely have a direct 12 V short to CPU/GPU. On this board this situation is always a no fix.