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Repair guides and disassembly information for laptops manufactured by ASUS.

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Does Asus use the same battery charger for all their PC's?

I have this really old Asus notebook or PC or whatever it is. It just cut out on me a few years ago and I'm trying to order a new charger for it so I can use it again. Now, I don't know if it was a prblem with the battery or the charger but I'm going to get both I guess, just in case (tho that's expensive and annoying). It's a Li-Lon m32-1005. Exactly what kind of charger do I need to order?

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Can I use 65W charger with ASUS A55LA?

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DomiNik. It depends, what is the wattage of the original charger

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Original charger was 60W

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Original charger was of 60W which got broken, I ordered 65W will it work or not?

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YEs it will. It will just use what wattage it needs, The extra watts are just extra.

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No, but you can find universal laptop chargers online that are pretty cheap. Look for one that has the same power rating as your current charger (i.e. 60W, 90W, etc.) and one that has a tip that matches the one you've got from Asus and you're all set.

If you remove the battery and it works while plugged in with your existing adapter then you may have a battery problem...

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can i use a lenovo chormbook charger for my Ausu vivobook

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No! You need to get a laptop charger that matches the wattage amount of the original and never go cheap on them. This is a fast track to destroying your motherboard through and through! Too much wattage getting pushed through the charger will override the expected impedance, or ohms, and get everything that has a wire connected to the power input fried, like your cpu's vcore, and the GPUs.

If you spend a lot on a laptop, then dont cheap out on the part that feeds power from the wall to your laptop.

Liquid damage, following impact damage, and then 3rd party inexpensive charges is the order of most common laptop killers. Always go with the manufacture charger.

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Ignorance parading as knowledge. Mr Pollock doesn't (sorry to tell you) understand the meaning of volts amps & watts. If your adapter provides the right voltage your laptop will take the right amount of current& as a result it will consume whatever power it needs. An underpowered adapter will not be able to maintain the voltage when power requirement gets above it's capacity, however if the battery is ok momentary higher power requirements won't be a problem if the adapter can supply enough power on average. Cheap adapters MIGHT provide too much voltage & cause damage. In many years working with PCs I've _never_ seen this. So Mr P's reputation 1 seems generous. Kellen talked sense

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Theodore Pollock IS A AN IDIOT WHO BELIVE THAT WATT, has something to do with the voltage and current...the higher the watt is...its better, so long the voltage and poliarity (on the plugg) is right !!!!!!!!!

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Theodore has no idea what he is talking about

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@jarleiceman4

Power (expressed in Watts) has everything to do with the Voltage and Current!

Power in Watts is the product of the Voltage multiplied by the Current i.e. P (Watts) = V (Volts) x I (Amps)

Read up on Ohm's Law. It is one of the fundamentals in understanding how electric circuits work.

See the comment by @tom74 above

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