Looking for HORNG CHIH (DC power jack) distributors

A

Adrian C

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi,

Been given a Mitac 7321 laptop to fix with a broken dc power jack
(socket). The part number of this socket is 'IDJ-D21-6T'

<http://www.hchtwn.com.tw/html/Pdf/single/DC_02_04.pdf>

Anyone know where I purchase such a socket. HORNG CHIH don't respond to
emails or faxes, and Mitac UK are only interested in selling replacement
laptop motherboards. I know it looks like a common garden 2.5mm DC jack,
but the original does match pad locations on the PCB - others don't and
bodging it is not my name....

I'm located in the UK.
 
Adrian said:
Anyone know where I purchase such a socket. HORNG CHIH don't respond to
emails or faxes, and Mitac UK are only interested in selling replacement
laptop motherboards. I know it looks like a common garden 2.5mm DC jack,

Of course, you're willing to buy 10,000 of these jacks to satisfy your
urge for cosmetic beauty on one laptop, right? If so, contact Horng
Chih again and tell them you want to buy 10K samples for initial
production and 250,000 per year thereafter.

These miscellaneous Asian parts are absolutely unobtainable at retail.

The good news is that they are VERY rarely unique parts. Much more
likely you will find a standard part at Mouser, Digi-Key, etc that
exactly matches the part you're looking at.
 
A

Adrian C

Jan 1, 1970
0
The good news is that they are VERY rarely unique parts. Much more
likely you will find a standard part at Mouser, Digi-Key, etc that
exactly matches the part you're looking at.

Thanks, Searched Mouser, Digi-Key, CPC, Farnell, Maplin, RS, Rapid -
Nothing. The PCB mounting base pin configuration of the jack is 90
degrees to standard types. :-(

Oh well, looks like I may have to bodge it inverting the socket, strands
of connecting wire and lashings of super glue for strength. Nice fire
hazard at 19V/6Amps if the fuse holds out. Would be interested if other
laptop motherboard repairers go to such lengths on Mitac junk....
 
Adrian said:
Oh well, looks like I may have to bodge it inverting the socket, strands
of connecting wire and lashings of super glue for strength. Nice fire

I would suggest two-part epoxy and insulated multistrand wire. Super
glue (cyanoacrylates) doesn't fill voids and can't be used to provide
lateral support; it merely bonds contacting surfaces.
hazard at 19V/6Amps if the fuse holds out. Would be interested if other
laptop motherboard repairers go to such lengths on Mitac junk....

Officially, there is no component-level repair on this type of
electronics, only replacement at the subassy level.
 
D

Don Heller

Jan 1, 1970
0
Adrian C wrote:




I would suggest two-part epoxy and insulated multistrand wire. Super
glue (cyanoacrylates) doesn't fill voids and can't be used to provide
lateral support; it merely bonds contacting surfaces.




Officially, there is no component-level repair on this type of
electronics, only replacement at the subassy level.
I had a TV fall off the stand during an earthquake, and the F connector
was ripped out of the tuner. A local repairman, rather than replace the
entire tuner assembly, just soldered a short coax cable to the tuner and
presented me with a two-inch long dongle with a male F at the back of
the TV. Very cheap, and works great. You might consider this method,
which will eliminate structural problems. Ugly, but beautiful.

Don
 
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