Wrong size caps, what can you do?

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  • SonicSteve
    Senior Member
    • Oct 2005
    • 54

    #1

    Wrong size caps, what can you do?

    Hi guys,
    I have some boards with 3300uf 6.3v caps on them. All OST and I want to replace them.
    Problem though,
    They are all 10mm Diameter and very close together in many places.
    The ones I can find to order are 12.5mm diameter and I doubt that they will fit in such tight spots.
    I've searched 3 distributors and none carry suitable capacitors in the diameter that I need.
    It seems that once you go over 2200uf the diameter is almost always 12.5mm or larger.
    Does anyone have a solution to this?
    I've looked at united chemicom, nichicon, and panasonic. None of the suitable series have the right size.
  • dood
    Deputy dood
    • Mar 2004
    • 2462
    • USA

    #2
    Re: Wrong size caps, what can you do?

    topcat can get you 3300uf 6.3v 10mm caps. Also, Samxon makes a suitable replacement.
    Ludicrous gibs!

    Comment

    • gonzo0815
      Badcaps Legend
      • Feb 2006
      • 1600

      #3
      Re: Wrong size caps, what can you do?

      Where is your loaction?

      In generall, you can bent or angle them, but this needs some room.

      Comment

      • yanz
        Badcaps Veteran
        • Nov 2004
        • 910

        #4
        Re: Wrong size caps, what can you do?

        Originally posted by SonicSteve
        Hi guys,
        I have some boards with 3300uf 6.3v caps on them. All OST and I want to replace them.
        Problem though,
        They are all 10mm Diameter and very close together in many places.
        The ones I can find to order are 12.5mm diameter and I doubt that they will fit in such tight spots.
        I've searched 3 distributors and none carry suitable capacitors in the diameter that I need.
        It seems that once you go over 2200uf the diameter is almost always 12.5mm or larger.
        Does anyone have a solution to this?
        I've looked at united chemicom, nichicon, and panasonic. None of the suitable series have the right size.
        unfortunately that's true. these are the only 10mm 3300uf 6.3v i can find on the datasheet:

        https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showpo...5&postcount=12




        i have the sanyo wg, iirc big pope (joe) too. topcat have the mbz. mcz can be found at wai fong (china) iirc.

        [quote]
        It seems that once you go over 2200uf the diameter is almost always 12.5mm or larger.
        Does anyone have a solution to this? [quote]

        i would recommend to use 2700uf 6.3v 10mm caps (god brands) if you can find them to replace those 3300uf-ers.
        days are so short when you actually do something..

        Comment

        • gonzo0815
          Badcaps Legend
          • Feb 2006
          • 1600

          #5
          Re: Wrong size caps, what can you do?

          Depending on the motherboard desing, i would not replace 3300uf caps with lower ones. Especially the AMD soket A platfrom, with only 4 3300uf caps are sensitive for that. I have had no luck on a K7s8xe+ with 2700uF Oscon. 4x 3300uF is just not mutch margin to reduce it. The ESR is on those boards very important too. Any negative change will cripple the transient behaivior. I would certainely loock to obtain the correct caps for those boards. I think TC or BigPope are the way to go. Waifong`s MCZ are not bad too, and reliable service.
          For those other boards, with unpopulated silkscrean, you can use 2200Uf caps and adding the missing ones.
          Last edited by gonzo0815; 11-01-2006, 11:03 AM.

          Comment

          • bgavin
            Badcaps Legend
            • Jan 2007
            • 1355

            #6
            Re: Wrong size caps, what can you do?

            I just purchased 250 pieces of Rubyicon from Wai Fong. They charged $20 USD for Express Mail shipping, and it hit my doorstep a few days later.

            Packing was safe and secure, and all items were received. Web site ordering is painless. Due to shipping costs, USA buyers should make bulk orders to avoid paying high shipping costs for a few items.

            Comment

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