Hi again gang! Last time I posted here I was working on my IZ3D monitor (I'm using it now to write this, 3 months later!) Thanks for those who helped me choose correct components.
This time I'm about to recap ELEVEN bad nichicon caps on my old firewall box. I had to retire this SFF firewall box over 2 years ago because it wouldn't start 19/20 times I tried. Opened her up and whoa, lots of swollen caps.
I found a recap kit on the CapKing website last year, but I'm just now getting around to pulling the mobo and looking at what I ordered. I've had good luck with their kits in the past but I know alot more about capacitors now after the clinic you guys put on for me with my monitor repair, so I'm being a little more choosey with what I use.
I'm pretty confident in the caps they sent me but the picture on their site is obviously for a rev 2 board where mine is a rev 3 (slightly different capacitor layout, and probably different values on a few).
Fortunately, ALL the capacitors that I can visually identify as bad are identical and the replacements sent include 2 extras of that model.
I would love one of you Capacitor experts (cause I'm not even close) to look at the specs (which at least I learned enough to be able to provide these correctly) and tell me if these will give me any problems?
Original:
nichicon 2200uf 6.3v HM-series
code: 239
size: 10x20
impedance: 13 (mOhm)
rated ripple: 2550 (mArms)
-------------
Replacement (capking):
Rubycon 1500uF 10v MCZ-series
code: ???
size: 8x20
impedance: ???
ESR: 12 (mOhm)
Rated Ripple: 2350
The specs look very close to me except that 2200 being taken down to 1500, that seems not right to me. Is that going to be ok? I mean the site says they've used these to replace them many times but the picture shows these should be 1500uF v6.3 (which is of course lower, but the fact the picture doesn't match up and the specs of the capacitors they sent are different from the ones on the picture really makes me nervous). I'm not sure what replacing 2200s with 1500s will do but I'm pretty sure that was one of the most important numbers to match up on my last recap adventure.
Experts, what do you think? Trust em and soldier them in or start looking for replacements myself? (I spent 19$ on this kit last year so I'm hoping they will work.)
This time I'm about to recap ELEVEN bad nichicon caps on my old firewall box. I had to retire this SFF firewall box over 2 years ago because it wouldn't start 19/20 times I tried. Opened her up and whoa, lots of swollen caps.
I found a recap kit on the CapKing website last year, but I'm just now getting around to pulling the mobo and looking at what I ordered. I've had good luck with their kits in the past but I know alot more about capacitors now after the clinic you guys put on for me with my monitor repair, so I'm being a little more choosey with what I use.
I'm pretty confident in the caps they sent me but the picture on their site is obviously for a rev 2 board where mine is a rev 3 (slightly different capacitor layout, and probably different values on a few).
Fortunately, ALL the capacitors that I can visually identify as bad are identical and the replacements sent include 2 extras of that model.
I would love one of you Capacitor experts (cause I'm not even close) to look at the specs (which at least I learned enough to be able to provide these correctly) and tell me if these will give me any problems?
Original:
nichicon 2200uf 6.3v HM-series
code: 239
size: 10x20
impedance: 13 (mOhm)
rated ripple: 2550 (mArms)
-------------
Replacement (capking):
Rubycon 1500uF 10v MCZ-series
code: ???
size: 8x20
impedance: ???
ESR: 12 (mOhm)
Rated Ripple: 2350
The specs look very close to me except that 2200 being taken down to 1500, that seems not right to me. Is that going to be ok? I mean the site says they've used these to replace them many times but the picture shows these should be 1500uF v6.3 (which is of course lower, but the fact the picture doesn't match up and the specs of the capacitors they sent are different from the ones on the picture really makes me nervous). I'm not sure what replacing 2200s with 1500s will do but I'm pretty sure that was one of the most important numbers to match up on my last recap adventure.
Experts, what do you think? Trust em and soldier them in or start looking for replacements myself? (I spent 19$ on this kit last year so I'm hoping they will work.)

Comment