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I have a Dell Inspirion and the power supply port appears to be damaged.

Basically when I plug it in I get a nice popup telling me that it couldn't detect that its a Dell power supply so it won't charge the battery and underclocks the system. It still works for other purposes (that is, giving power).

I thought it was the actual power supply cable so I bought a new one, that worked for a while, provided I inserted it at JUST THE RIGHT angle. But now that's not working anymore, so I assume its the part which connects to the computer.

The battery charging I can live without, the underclocking I can't. I'd like a way around this issue. Things I've tried:

  1. Updating the BIOS
  2. Replacing the power supply cable
  3. Inserting it at different angles
  4. Turning it off and on again
  5. Swearing at it
  6. Twisting it while inserting it

So, is there a workaround somehow? I'd like to avoid taking out my soldering kit and risking permanently damaging expensive equipment if that's allright. I'm hoping for a software solution.

Added: The exact model is a Del Inspirion N5010

Hennes
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Haedrian
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9 Answers9

14

If you're ready for a hardcore solution, you can unsolder the ID chip from the AC adapter and solder it to the laptop's motherboard or even create a fake ID chip.

An ideal solution would be to patch the BIOS, but I've found only this discussion, nobody did it (yet?)

Can something be done on the software side?

Yes! At least, we can overcome underclocking. Battery won't load.

Linux:

Add processor.ignore_ppc=1 to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub, then run update-grub. Reboot.

Windows:

This paper describes Windows XP performance control policies and mentions this:

NOTE: All policies will always respect the highest available performance state currently available as reported in the _PPC method by system firmware, when using the ACPI 2.0 interface.

So, no native support. But there are third-party tools. I personally had success with RMClock, other people in this thread suggest using ThrottleStop instead.

user
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This solved my issue in two laptops, I searched and never came across this so I wanted to post it for someone else. These dell laptops were purchased refurbished with 3rd party chargers, batteries are dell.

8/17/2018 RE: Problem with laptops (E5430)

REINSTALL BATTERY DRIVER

  • Shut down the laptop
  • Unplug the AC Adapter from laptop
  • Remove the battery
  • Reconnect the AC Adapter to the laptop
  • Power on
  • Go the Start and type in Device Manager (search program and files) then Enter
  • Under Batteries, uninstall Microsoft AC Adapter and Microsoft ACPI- Compliant Control Method Battery (both)
  • Please note that this will auto-install for you again
  • Shut down laptop
  • Remove the AC Adapter from laptop
  • Insert the Battery and reconnect the AC Adapter
  • Power on the computer
  • You should now see the message, Plugged in, Charging
Giacomo1968
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FWIW: I "solved" it by disabling the SpeedStep Technology part in the BIOS.

Although the description there implies that this will then run the CPU at full throttle 100% of the time this not the case in reality. TaskManager shows the frequency to go up and down according to the load.

This does not fix the actual "PSU not recognized"-issue, but at least the machine isn't stuck at 1.18GHz anymore because of that.

deroby
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Okay, this is a well known issue. For whatever reason, on the power pin, Dell included a signal to tell the laptop what kind of power supply is connected. This does not always work right. In fact, there are MANY reports of this failing. There is usually a setting in the BIOS to fix this - you will have to boot to the BIOS and look around. The setting is usually about detecting power supply and to inactivate this feature.

Note: Seems from searching, some versions of the BIOS don't have the ability to shut off AC Adapter detection. Just have to try and search yours.

Blackbeagle
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My solution is ridiculously simple. But it works. First unplug the power cable from both ends. Also unplug the adapter. Then plug in everything and power up the computer. Then, when the computer is on, unplug the adapter, wait a few seconds and plug it back in. That's all. Don't know why, but it works.

2

Problem is hardware restricting chip, which built-in in Dell charger - Dallas DS2501 - which sends ID signal on central pin of plug of charger.

For Russians:
Dell Power Supplies - Not Defined
Dell slows down, power supply is not detected. Solution: embeding of chip to laptop
Charge your Dell XPS laptop from any power adapter

For all:
Hacking dell laptop charger identification

0

For what it is worth, I have an xps 1502x with a temperamental 130 watt power supply. It would work sometimes and then not be recognized and charge the battery, only power the laptop. Sometimes reinserting or "cleaning" the connector would work. Saw another reply on another question/comment mentioning center pin wire breaking internally and requiring either new adapter or resoldering the middle pin wire. I tired the resolder middle pin option and it now works again. Cheaper than a new adapter. Hardest step was cutting open the wires at the connector pin.

Eric
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I was getting this error message on my 11" Dell Insipiron. Solved the problem when I noticed that inside the DC socket (on the laptop) is a central locating pin which need to be straightened. It was hard to identify as the pin protrudes only half the distance of the socket. I fixed it by re-straightening it with a dressmakers pin, a magnifying glass and some additional illumination helps. The problem became evident because I could no longer insert the DC jack (from the charger) fully into the laptops socket, it would power up the laptop, but not allow the battery to be charged.

David
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Sounds like it's the DC jack. Please note however that not all laptops require soldering to replace the DC jack. Some of them are removable components. You haven't told us which exact model Inspiron you have.