Dkl50 La-e802p - Boardview

Use the Boardview to trace the DC-IN jack connector (PF1 / PL1 area). Look for the first and second input MOSFETs (often labeled PQ301 and PQ302).

| Component | Specification | |------------------|----------------| | Form Factor | Laptop Motherboard | | CPU Support | [Specific CPU types] | | RAM | [Type, e.g., DDR4], [Speed], [Max Capacity] | | GPU | Integrated/[Dedicated option] | | Storage | [SATA, M.2, etc.] |

The official distribution channels for boardviews are usually Chinese repair databases (like or LaptopScheme ), but English repositories exist: Dkl50 La-e802p Boardview

: USB ports, audio jacks, HDMI or DisplayPort outputs, Ethernet jack (if not on an expansion card), and Wi-Fi/Bluetooth modules.

: This is where the Central Processing Unit (CPU) is installed. The type of socket (e.g., PGA, BGA) and the specific CPU models supported can significantly affect the board's capabilities. Use the Boardview to trace the DC-IN jack

Use the Boardview to find all decoupling ceramic capacitors connected directly to the +19V_PREREG or +PWR_SRC rail. One of these ceramic capacitors is likely cracked and shorted to the ground layer. Missing 3.3V and 5V Always-On Rails

Furthermore, you can print "assembly drawings." If you run a repair shop, print the Top and Bottom layers of the boardview on A3 paper. Laminate it. Use a dry-erase marker to note voltages while probing. This is faster than flipping between software tabs. : This is where the Central Processing Unit

If the IC is getting hot, use the Boardview to see what components rely on the LDO (Low Drop-Out) linear outputs. Frequently, a shorted Embedded Controller (EC) chip ( KB9022Q ) pulls down the 3.3V LDO rail. Corrupted BIOS or EC Firmware