Saturday 15 January 2011

DIY Pseudo "iMac"

This was the situation : I have an laptop (HP-DV5000) with 5 years which still works pretty well apart from the broken LCD, which was due it had already been at Breakpoint, Inercia, Euskal and almost all the college period in my backpack. So the LCD started to show some weird vertical coloured lines which would require a new LCD, which is almost the price of a new laptop...
After i started my current job, which is purely macintosh based, i noticed the iMac where actually an interesting concept to keep all the cables inside the computer. So i though maybe i can do something similar to my old laptop !

The basic idea was to mount the laptop behind an LCD monitor, my monitor (Sony SDM-S93) had a sliding plate behind which helped to mount the metal holder bars. After that I only needed some sort of electronic connection to power up the laptop, since the power button would be hidden under the lid. 

The electronic circuit consists in a relay which is activated when we press the front power/iddle button in the monitor, the relay acts as the power switch of the laptop. I could have connected directly the two switches, but that wouldn't be very safe and healthy for both the devices. The circuit steals 12V from the monitor PSU, which is always available whatever the current state(idle or on). On idle state the available current is very low, because the PSU switching circuit is working at a very small duty cycle to use less mains power, so the laptop switching circuit must be power efficient.

Monitor PSU and control circuit plus my circuit in the breadboard The compact version of the laptop switching circuit

After building the circuit I only needed to add some cables to the laptop which would intercept the power button signal, using my trusty Dremel i drilled a path through the plastic and used the hole of one screw to pass the cables. The cables end with a male conector to help mount and unmount the laptop from the suport, or even still use the laptop .. as a laptop :)

Drilled path to pass the cables
The end result isn't a iMac, but still, I managed to recycle old hardware to create a new "computer" which manages to accomplish all my current needs (Blender, development, office and minecraft :P). It was still has some issues due to idle/on/off state of monitor, when it's on iddle mode and we press the power button, it powers up the laptop and powers down the monitor (iddle->off), but pressing it again it powers up the monitor without powering down the laptop. I could easily fix this by intercepting also the monitor power switch and with some extra logic, but for now it's enough ! 

Back view Front view