Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
Is the Bestec worth recapping? I have several in the bin... just curious.
This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
had a customer in the store with an emachines with the imfamous craptastic bestec psu that was reading 14v on +5stby.
the mouse melted down and it and the mousepad was stuck to her table.
burned up the southbridge on the mobo and trashed the cpu and ram.Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
Man it's crazy the time bomb in your computer bad capacitors are.
I was reading article just now, some slightly bulging capacitors were removed and their values read they were rated 2200uF, but their real capacitance was as low as 78uF.
Also bad capacitors have high leakage current (as I understand this is something that should seriously be avoided). Which is one of the main causes workload on regulators which then short circuit and fuse circuit inside, which eventually causes unfiltered voltage direct from PSU into components, you don't need to imagine what happens when 1.7v chips get 5v instead.Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
Oh...my...
Yes, I think you win indeed! Welcome.Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
looks like you let all the smoke out of that one!
looks like you are leading in the who owns the worst burnup game!
and welcome!Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
I got that beat... I had a cap pop on a Soyo board, they claimed I samaged the board because there were componates missing (they f'ing BURNED OFF!!)Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
This situation is really serious. I guess I would see my lawyer if this happened to me (if it ever does!)Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
I've repaired some boards with this problem (some K7S5As and M805LRs) but they weren't as bad as this one. The MOSFETs were always bad, the rectifiers were always OK. Some of the base driving transistors were bad, some were OK - the older boards have two separate SMD driving transistors for each MOSFET, K7S6A has only two for all MOSFETs (at least they're in TO92 so can be replaced more easily). And of course bulged caps - always G-Luxon.Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
The desoldered devices on which you can recognize the mfr's logo - possibly Shindengen - and most of the mfr's P/N, S?S2525L, are dual rectifiers. The devices that are "extra well done" are the MOSFETs. I'll bet the smell was delightful ...Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
Similar...but the FETs did not desolder themselvesLeave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
i have seen lots of those type vrm's melt down like that.
and it always kills the cpu.
esp. amd chips.Leave a comment:
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Re: This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
Something like this K7S6A? It's not my board - owner http://daso.wz.cz
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break out the marshmellows baby........anyway, that is a perfect example for a class lawsuit. When you are dealing with fire hazards that is a major issue. Imagine a server cabinet burning down over the weekend from a bad PSU. It would not be pretty.Leave a comment:
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Wow Top,
Thats about enough to make a man cry there!!!! :roll:Leave a comment:
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This is Why You NEVER Ignore Bad Capacitors!
I received 3 VP6's this week that were completely trashed. I get emails and contacts all the time from customers who say "It would only crash once in a while", or "I didn't think the problem was that serious"... ARGGGG.... This VP6 is a prime reason why the minute you suspect or discover bad caps, replace them!! Don't wait!! Bad caps will not cure themselves!!
Sadly, this and the other 2 VP6's I received like it were destroyed. I didn't even bother to recap them , because the VRM FET's and the AGP power FET's were all shorted, and the torroid coil by the AGP was burnt beyond recognition. With damage like that, the voltage regulators are always fried, and many times the northbridge is also fried. In this particular VP6's case, it also BBQ'd 2GB of really nice Micron ECC PC133. You will note from the pictures the melted labels. This shouldn't have happened!!The only thing I pulled out of that board that was good was the CPU's, and I'm surprised they survived.
If you question your caps, take an expensive lesson from the owner of this board! REPLACE THEM ASAP!!!Tags: None- Stuck
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by momakaI know I've been a little scarce lately (like the last 2-3 years), but I'm still here and still doing my thing with fixing PSUs.
For today's considerations, I have a Seasonic B12 BC-550 [A551bcafh] 550 Watt ATX power supply for you (click on links for full size images).
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591771
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=3591772
It's a modern ATX unit with fixed (non-modular) cables and an 80-plus bronze certificate. Here's the label:
https://www.badcaps.net/filedata/fetch?id=359177... -
by eryjusHello,
First, I am a complete noob with high voltage stuff. I'm learning, but I need help by someone looking over my shoulder.
I recently came into posession of a Heathkit IO-4205 5MHz Dual Trace Oscilloscope. The documentation is copyright 1978. I'm told it works.
I opened it up to check the caps before I applied power, and found the following black caps and wanted to know what they were. They are on the power supply board. I was able to read the name and model and came up with, "Nytronics 162J-1, 0.1uF, 20% tolerance, 2000VDC."
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Channel: General Capacitor Questions & Issues
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by Paxman_SwedeHello!
I have two projects on my work bench. One is a friends dead JBL Xtreme speaker with a blown voltage regulator and corresponding bulged and shorted cap. That cap has clear markings so I know what replacement I need for it.
The other project however is a whole different deal. It's a Zoom 9000 guitar effect from the 90th that has developed a devil hound howl when there is no input from the guitar. I'm guessing caps problem. So, since I don't really use this effect anymore I thought it would be a perfect project to learn on.
I have studied the board and...-
Channel: General Capacitor Questions & Issues
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by captain150I'm trying to repair two old VCRs, they both have bad caps. One has leaky ones, the other would barely run until I subbed in some caps from another power supply I had laying around (though they are the wrong values). This vcr works for an hour or two, but then the power supply starts whining and the picture gets lines in it. I didn't replace all the secondary caps, so another voltage might still be problematic, or the values I used are too far off.
I've been on mouser and digikey but the options are a bit overwhelming. I just need some new ones that will work. They don't need to be top quality,...-
Channel: General Capacitor Questions & Issues
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by FoetussGood evening
I recently aquired a rev 1.1 Gigabyte 60XT, and was suprised of the amount of leaking caps for a motherboard of the P3 era. Especially the way the 330µf caps seems like the housing discolored even.
Now, there are some 3300µF 6.3V KZG series around the CPU. Would it be OK to replace them with something like EEUFR1A332 ? (Panasonic FR 3300µF 10V). Or was this board designed around very low ESR caps?
But I was also suprised about the bigger boys, which are 330µF 25V.
Could it be they used 25V caps because they were cheaper / available at that time?...-
Channel: General Capacitor Questions & Issues
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