For $29/mo, we provide access to advanced level technicians who will answer your questions on any Macbook board related matter to the best of their knowledge promptly & walk you through how to solve your problem so you can deliver a working board to your customer.
CHGR_RST_IN 0V at all times.
R/C/Q7030/40 all look okay.
Checked all 4 CD3215 chips again and the surrounding components and all looks good.
Remember the machine makes it to 20V 0A only with battery connected but the Mac does not power on.
The Mac also does not enter DFU mode.
I checked all CD3215 on another board and all of them make it to 20V, I reballed them again and installed them back, also replaced U3000 and U2800 and UB000 just in case as well as U7000 but I get the same exact 5V and 0.080A on all 4 ports without loops on any othem.
CD3215 Pin 2...
Thanks, if I check TBT_T_SPI_MISO and TBT_T_SPI_MISO with scope and the signals are correct on both sides of Mac does that mean U2890 and UB090 are good as far as allowing the Mac to go to 20V? Replacing this chips is a pain...
Board came in with a short on PP5V_S3 U7200, replaced it 2 times just in case, short gone and now board makes it to PP5V_S3 with 0V and about 5 seconds later it pulses to 5V, most other rails also pulse, board is pretty clean otherwise.
SMC, U7400, U6100 (With Clean BIOS) replaced but same...
Board came in with all 4 CD3215 shorted to ground.
Replaced all 4 with donor ones and now I get 20V only with battery connected but no charging.
All LDOs present in all 4 ports.
Without battery board takes 5V and around 0.080A and none of them are cycling power.
U2890 and UB090 are working...
Clean board, trackpad/keyboard don't work either before or after OS loads, already tried known good trackpad/flex/keyboard even tested it on a different case and same thing.
External mouse and keyboard does work fine
Alt key doesnt work so no boot menu but even before boot there is no trackpad...
SSD shows up in Disk Utilities on another Mac if I run first aid it works with no errors however I cannot see it in finder or any other SSD testing software.