What could be the name of this rare type of HP Pavilion power connectors?

The name of the pictureThe name of the pictureThe name of the pictureClash Royale CLAN TAG#URR8PPP












5














It is a HP Pavilion G6 laptop, and I am trying to identify its uncommon power plug. Looking around on the net, I see only the more standard, center pin power plugs, but not this. I think, maybe most HP pavilion G6 might have the common center-pin power socket, but this is an exception.



On this image, we can see in the middle a 5-pin power connector. Around a central pin, we can see 4 other pins in a symmetrical, rectangular layout.



What is its name?



Additionally, I see the following data on the plate, below the battery:



  • Serial: 5CD2076JFW

  • Product: B1Y27EA#BH4

  • Model: g6 - 1308sk

enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • @K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:42










  • I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:48















5














It is a HP Pavilion G6 laptop, and I am trying to identify its uncommon power plug. Looking around on the net, I see only the more standard, center pin power plugs, but not this. I think, maybe most HP pavilion G6 might have the common center-pin power socket, but this is an exception.



On this image, we can see in the middle a 5-pin power connector. Around a central pin, we can see 4 other pins in a symmetrical, rectangular layout.



What is its name?



Additionally, I see the following data on the plate, below the battery:



  • Serial: 5CD2076JFW

  • Product: B1Y27EA#BH4

  • Model: g6 - 1308sk

enter image description here










share|improve this question























  • @K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:42










  • I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:48













5












5








5


1





It is a HP Pavilion G6 laptop, and I am trying to identify its uncommon power plug. Looking around on the net, I see only the more standard, center pin power plugs, but not this. I think, maybe most HP pavilion G6 might have the common center-pin power socket, but this is an exception.



On this image, we can see in the middle a 5-pin power connector. Around a central pin, we can see 4 other pins in a symmetrical, rectangular layout.



What is its name?



Additionally, I see the following data on the plate, below the battery:



  • Serial: 5CD2076JFW

  • Product: B1Y27EA#BH4

  • Model: g6 - 1308sk

enter image description here










share|improve this question















It is a HP Pavilion G6 laptop, and I am trying to identify its uncommon power plug. Looking around on the net, I see only the more standard, center pin power plugs, but not this. I think, maybe most HP pavilion G6 might have the common center-pin power socket, but this is an exception.



On this image, we can see in the middle a 5-pin power connector. Around a central pin, we can see 4 other pins in a symmetrical, rectangular layout.



What is its name?



Additionally, I see the following data on the plate, below the battery:



  • Serial: 5CD2076JFW

  • Product: B1Y27EA#BH4

  • Model: g6 - 1308sk

enter image description here







laptop power-supply power hp-pavilion






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 27 '18 at 22:41







peterh

















asked Dec 27 '18 at 22:32









peterhpeterh

1,40782137




1,40782137











  • @K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:42










  • I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:48
















  • @K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:42










  • I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 22:48















@K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
– peterh
Dec 27 '18 at 22:42




@K7AAY Thanks, I did. It wasn't on the bottom, it was below the battery, but finally I've found. I extended it into the post.
– peterh
Dec 27 '18 at 22:42












I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
– K7AAY
Dec 27 '18 at 22:48




I don't sell, I volunteer to help here. It is a center pin or 'coaxial' connector, made by Philmore.
– K7AAY
Dec 27 '18 at 22:48










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















12














The Service Guide on pages 18 and 21 shows the replacement female coaxial power connector with cord which fits inside the laptop is HP Part # 641137-001. The 90W power supply is commonly available on Amazon in Germany. Page 29 of the Service Guide shows the part numbers for the power supply (609947-001) and power cords (in your case, 490371-021). If you can't find the power plug from the information which follows, then get a replacement power supply, which Stateside is only $9-$25.



That male coaxial power plug is sold by Frys.com Philmore DC plug.



and is described as "Commonly used on power supplies for many Dell and HP laptop computers, this end can be used on 2 wire or 3 wire power cords. Features Outside Diameter: 7.4mm Inside Diameter: 5.0mm Center Pin: 0.6mm Rating: 18.5-19VDC @ 4A Maximum."



Product details



Specification

SKU 7310264

Model 274

Brand PHILMORE

UPC 038975002743



The four symmetrical, rectangular holes are an artifact of the injection molding process used to make the female connector, and have no connector behind them.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:12






  • 4




    @peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
    – Kamil Maciorowski
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:16










  • peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:22






  • 1




    @JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:21







  • 1




    @K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:25











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









12














The Service Guide on pages 18 and 21 shows the replacement female coaxial power connector with cord which fits inside the laptop is HP Part # 641137-001. The 90W power supply is commonly available on Amazon in Germany. Page 29 of the Service Guide shows the part numbers for the power supply (609947-001) and power cords (in your case, 490371-021). If you can't find the power plug from the information which follows, then get a replacement power supply, which Stateside is only $9-$25.



That male coaxial power plug is sold by Frys.com Philmore DC plug.



and is described as "Commonly used on power supplies for many Dell and HP laptop computers, this end can be used on 2 wire or 3 wire power cords. Features Outside Diameter: 7.4mm Inside Diameter: 5.0mm Center Pin: 0.6mm Rating: 18.5-19VDC @ 4A Maximum."



Product details



Specification

SKU 7310264

Model 274

Brand PHILMORE

UPC 038975002743



The four symmetrical, rectangular holes are an artifact of the injection molding process used to make the female connector, and have no connector behind them.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:12






  • 4




    @peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
    – Kamil Maciorowski
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:16










  • peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:22






  • 1




    @JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:21







  • 1




    @K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:25
















12














The Service Guide on pages 18 and 21 shows the replacement female coaxial power connector with cord which fits inside the laptop is HP Part # 641137-001. The 90W power supply is commonly available on Amazon in Germany. Page 29 of the Service Guide shows the part numbers for the power supply (609947-001) and power cords (in your case, 490371-021). If you can't find the power plug from the information which follows, then get a replacement power supply, which Stateside is only $9-$25.



That male coaxial power plug is sold by Frys.com Philmore DC plug.



and is described as "Commonly used on power supplies for many Dell and HP laptop computers, this end can be used on 2 wire or 3 wire power cords. Features Outside Diameter: 7.4mm Inside Diameter: 5.0mm Center Pin: 0.6mm Rating: 18.5-19VDC @ 4A Maximum."



Product details



Specification

SKU 7310264

Model 274

Brand PHILMORE

UPC 038975002743



The four symmetrical, rectangular holes are an artifact of the injection molding process used to make the female connector, and have no connector behind them.






share|improve this answer






















  • Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:12






  • 4




    @peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
    – Kamil Maciorowski
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:16










  • peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:22






  • 1




    @JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:21







  • 1




    @K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:25














12












12








12






The Service Guide on pages 18 and 21 shows the replacement female coaxial power connector with cord which fits inside the laptop is HP Part # 641137-001. The 90W power supply is commonly available on Amazon in Germany. Page 29 of the Service Guide shows the part numbers for the power supply (609947-001) and power cords (in your case, 490371-021). If you can't find the power plug from the information which follows, then get a replacement power supply, which Stateside is only $9-$25.



That male coaxial power plug is sold by Frys.com Philmore DC plug.



and is described as "Commonly used on power supplies for many Dell and HP laptop computers, this end can be used on 2 wire or 3 wire power cords. Features Outside Diameter: 7.4mm Inside Diameter: 5.0mm Center Pin: 0.6mm Rating: 18.5-19VDC @ 4A Maximum."



Product details



Specification

SKU 7310264

Model 274

Brand PHILMORE

UPC 038975002743



The four symmetrical, rectangular holes are an artifact of the injection molding process used to make the female connector, and have no connector behind them.






share|improve this answer














The Service Guide on pages 18 and 21 shows the replacement female coaxial power connector with cord which fits inside the laptop is HP Part # 641137-001. The 90W power supply is commonly available on Amazon in Germany. Page 29 of the Service Guide shows the part numbers for the power supply (609947-001) and power cords (in your case, 490371-021). If you can't find the power plug from the information which follows, then get a replacement power supply, which Stateside is only $9-$25.



That male coaxial power plug is sold by Frys.com Philmore DC plug.



and is described as "Commonly used on power supplies for many Dell and HP laptop computers, this end can be used on 2 wire or 3 wire power cords. Features Outside Diameter: 7.4mm Inside Diameter: 5.0mm Center Pin: 0.6mm Rating: 18.5-19VDC @ 4A Maximum."



Product details



Specification

SKU 7310264

Model 274

Brand PHILMORE

UPC 038975002743



The four symmetrical, rectangular holes are an artifact of the injection molding process used to make the female connector, and have no connector behind them.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 27 '18 at 23:40

























answered Dec 27 '18 at 22:55









K7AAYK7AAY

3,70621538




3,70621538











  • Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:12






  • 4




    @peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
    – Kamil Maciorowski
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:16










  • peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:22






  • 1




    @JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:21







  • 1




    @K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:25

















  • Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
    – peterh
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:12






  • 4




    @peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
    – Kamil Maciorowski
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:16










  • peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
    – K7AAY
    Dec 27 '18 at 23:22






  • 1




    @JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:21







  • 1




    @K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
    – peterh
    Dec 28 '18 at 0:25
















Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
– peterh
Dec 27 '18 at 23:12




Thank you very much the extensive search! However, as you can see, it has 5 pins. The search what you suggested shows only the typical center-pin layout. I searched for the images for this serial number, but I've found nothing what would look like the father version of this connector. Although most images aren't very clear.
– peterh
Dec 27 '18 at 23:12




4




4




@peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
– Kamil Maciorowski
Dec 27 '18 at 23:16




@peterh Why do you think that every hole must indicate a pin?
– Kamil Maciorowski
Dec 27 '18 at 23:16












peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
– K7AAY
Dec 27 '18 at 23:22




peterh, just take a close look at one of the plug ends on any of the google.com/… replacements I found. You will see there's only one center pin, no four symmetrical, rectangular pins surrounding it inside the outer shell. Freund, I volunteered at freegeek.org refurbishing donated laptops for a couple of years, and I have seen hundreds of those power supplies on HP Pavillions.
– K7AAY
Dec 27 '18 at 23:22




1




1




@JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
– peterh
Dec 28 '18 at 0:21





@JamieHanrahan Thanks. This is what also I suspect, despite that it is highly uncommon. The original HP papers are too strong argument to simply deny it.
– peterh
Dec 28 '18 at 0:21





1




1




@K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
– peterh
Dec 28 '18 at 0:25





@K7AAY Well, in Germany it is not so simple, service costs are in the skies. They would likely say that my laptop doesn't worth their price and they will have right. My secondary goal is to do some old-laptop-revival hobby repair. I think your argument, citing the original HP papers are too strong, despite that it looks uncommon. So I bought a power supply (price was 18 EUR + shipping). It will be shipped between 1/4 - 1/10. +1 given. If it matches, you get an accept, too :-) Thank you very much again!
– peterh
Dec 28 '18 at 0:25


















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