Sounds as if you had a few sips from an $800 cup of coffee.
I ran a google on “computer restoration after coffee spill’. http://www.artsprague.com/a/articles/notebookspills.html
(unless you are the one in one hundred people who actually makes good backups)
Take it to a repair place. And buy a separate keyboard.
Coffee in the cooling fan of the cpu is a bad thing
Go online and find a parts or assembly manual for the machine. Popping off the keyboard should be a snap. Most keyboards have a plastic sheet/shield under them to keep crap out of the computer’s innards. If it boots up and loads the OS, you’ll probably be ok removing the keyboard, cleaning it and then reinstalling it. If the keyboard’s all made of plastic with the exception of the metal mounting tabs (if any)and no embedded electronic components like a button mouse, just hose it down, dry it and put it back in. I’ve been there — and this has worked fine for me 2+ years later.
I would have poured it out as best I could. Remove the keys from the keyboard and turned it upside down using a pillow or something with a towel on top. I would not have tried to start it until later, when it was drier.
But it sounds like a real nightmare. Thank goodness I’m only drinking ice water with my lower-end Toshiba.
All good advice so far.
I’d also recommend lots and lots of isopropyl (you don’t want to leave coffee residue on any of the pcb’s, it will corrode the traces)and compressed air works great for drying the alcohol quickly.
Just make sure it’s unplugged and the battery is removed before squirting anything...
I had cat vomit on mine (don’t ask). That was the most expensive cat I have ever owned.
Throw the laptop away and keep the 2' x 3' board as a memento of what happened and why you should never have a loaded coffee cup near the computer. Buy another laptop. Copy the data from the old hard drive to the hard drive in the new laptop. In 3-4 days you should feel somewhat better if not euphoric.
Very carefully use rubbing alcohol. You will be taking your computer apart to completely clean and will be with out, while it is being cleaned. You need to have a lot confidence and dexterity to do it.
There could still be moisture inside and you can run a blow dryer through it to see if that helps.
I dropped my brand new Garmin/Palm into a cup of coffee 5 years ago. I took it apart and very carefully cleaned everything. Just a little ghost in the lower left hand corner of screen but that’s it.
I was going to buy another one, when a friend, who does recovery on hard disks told me what to and that is how they do it.
Google your very situation with keywords and you will find, probably on Meta Cafe, video of how to go about the process.
this guy had the same problem but you have already done what he said to do.
follow the links on the story:
http://www.inklingmagazine.com/inkycircus/detail/laptop-911-how-to-save-your-computer-from-a-coffee-spill/
I completely killed the company provided laptop after getting a small amount of jamaica [hibiscus drink] on it.
It is dead. Good luck.
One problem with spills is that there are plenty of places in a notebook which can hold water for weeks, if not months - parts and cables are packed very close to each other. It is not enough to "not power it up" for a day or two because the motherboard has a battery on it, and the voltage of that battery is enough to corrode the 4 mil traces that power some chips on the board (such as the real time clock, for one.) The green solder mask won't be enough, it's not a conformal coating. Also note that BGAs have non-isolated contacts under the chip, and tight spaces between pads (0.6 mm grid is not uncommon.) Water caught there won't ever dry naturally, and you can't remove the motherboard to dry it in a proper oven. During fabrication of notebooks manufacturers use deionized water to wash boards.
The fact that your coffee had cream & sugar in it doesn't help either. Cream may not dissolve well, it's a bunch of heavy organic stuff; sugar absorbs moisture from the air, may become conductive and may cause shorts - especially considering that most of modern electronics is CMOS, with high impedance of inputs, weak drivers, and as high speed as possible. An extra load caused by residue may well drop the signal below the switching threshold or cause coupling to neighboring traces. Resulting malfunctions are nearly impossible to find or fix.
So while in theory you can repair the notebook, in practice it may be laborious, and you may still have some substandard performance (like sticky keys.) If I were you I would try it, and I'd consider myself lucky if the cleanup works. But I'd be prepared to replace.
I would take out the battery,Make sure the system is off,then rinse the system out with demineralised water.Then use a hair dryer to dry it out.
Thats the only way I know to clean up after an accident like that.Using anything else might gum things up and make things sticky.
Make sure that system is thoughly dry before you reinstall that battery though.You don’t want a short circuit caused by excess water.
If - if - you're lucky, you may just save yourself the cost of a new laptop.
If it’s under warranty, then please disregard the following suggestions:
However if you’re mechanically/electronically inclined at all, most inspiron dells have a 2.5 hard drive which is pretty easy to remove. The drive connector will either be IDE or SATA. The IDE drives have pins, the SATA has a solid connector with contacts rather than pins.
Figure out which your drive is, by looking at the connector. If it’s got a bunch of small pins sticking out the end - it’s IDE. If it’s got the connector with a number of metal contacts along the side, then it’s SATA.
Stop by a good electronics store - Fry’s if you have one around where you are, or something similar. One of the big shops with lots of geek parts. Pick up a USB/IDE/SATA adapter.
Something like this:
http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=10929836
You can then access the data on your drive from another PC or notebook and save the most important data...
Once you’re got your crucial data saved, then you can just have fun with the recovery efforts. Then it will become play, rather than stress.
Good way to learn about your computer. :)