Salvage the data from the drives and have them copied to your new laptop. At the very least you probably fried your motherboard & damaged your keyboard. To repair them is probably more costly than purchasing a new laptop(voice of experience). The drives may or may not work. Your main concern is the data. You can purchase a hard drive power adapter from ebay to power the removed laptop drive(s) and connect to a new computer via USB port to copy all of your files for about $25 and a little bit of time. Or have a computer shop do it for a fee.
This seems to be an issue with this range of laptops. As the only information you've provided is it won't start we can only make assumptions. If it's still in warranty period send it back and get a refund. If not, the most common fault for this model appears to be a defective hard drive so it'll probably want replacing.
Hello, first have you tried checking the drivers in device manager to make sure the correct driver is installed? If no then right click computer, then click properties, then device manager and make sure there is no yellow exclamation points in the list next to network devices. Also is the wireless device listed? If not then the motherboard is bad. If is is then all you need to do is install the latest driver from hp.com. If the motherboard is bad it is caused by overheating due to an nvidia chip onboard which can be fixed. Hope this helps. My youtube channel can be found here
Ok, on a laptop you need to get some cups and label them toput the screws in so you will know where they came from. Remove the PowerCord, Remove the Battery then start removing all thescrews from the bottom of the laptop. Then remove all the devices fromthe bottom of the laptop such as the hard drive, the memory, dvd/cd drive,wireless card, etc. Take note of how the wires are on the wireless card,those are the antennas. Look inside the battery case, hard drive case, memory case and dvd drive slotfor screw. Some screws on the bottom case in inside of some of the devicecases might have the icon of a keyboard next to it. Those screws hold thekeyboard in place. Turn the laptop over, remove the strip that is just above the keyboard but becareful because a cable might be attached to it. Then remove the screwsthat hold the keyboard in place that are under where the strip was and gentlylift the keyboard out because there is definitely a cable under it.Next you can remove the screws from the lcd hinges at the corners and lift thelcd screen off, also note that you will have to pull the antennas cable and thelcd cable when you remove the lcd.Next start removing any screws that hold the palmrest in place. Take note ofany cables that are attached to the palmrest and remove them then lift thepalmrest off.Next start removing any screws you see that hold the motherboard to the bottomcase, then lift the motherboard out an start replacing the fan.A digital camera to take pictures will be most helpful to refresh you memory ofwhere things were.
I have the same model with the same problem, a friend of mine who is a technician removed the cooler and cleaned it, then with a hot air gun heated the video chip and the computer worked again
Sounds like a harware issue for sure, You know that you have one issue with the bad display. Since it stayed on while running disk check - which doesn't require much ni the way of graphics - it makes me think that the shutdown issue relates to the failing video interface. Some laptops will allow you to upgrade the video, but I don't honestly know if this is one of them. If so, this is where I would start looking.
If your bank statement is not in the Quicken format, you cannot do that. Best see if it will download into MS Excel. If not, get in touch with the Bank
I think you have a broken USB keyboard or USB port. Simply plugging in the keyboard should be enough to make it work. First try the keyboard in a different USB port. Test the caps lock to see if the LED goes on and off. Also try a different keyboard and also test it in a different computer.
1) Reset your computer.
2) Unplug the cable from the computer to the monitor and check to see if its damaged, if OK plug it back in.
3) On windows computer, click windows key / windows system / control panel / device manager / display adapters (click on icon) / Update driver
what computers.?? 1000's of models over 30 years. made
F10 is BIOS screens, so if that works, BIOS. and any screen
then the PC is not booting.
try booting to CD? *(a free linux live cd?) as a test.
if that works
run HDD tests. next
ill stop here, if you can get this far, we go to next step
F11 HDD reload the OS, if PC is 2006 or newer from HP.