The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
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"¡Me encanta "Me Encanta o Enlistarlo con Hilary Farr!" -Mí mismo
"There's nothing more unattractive than a chick smoking a cigarette" -Topcat
"Today's lesson in pissivity comes in the form of a ziplock baggie full of GPU extension brackets & hardware that for the last ~3 years have been on my bench, always in my way, getting moved around constantly....and yesterday I found myself in need of them....and the bastards are now nowhere to be found! Motherfracker!!" -Topcat
"did I see a chair fly? I think I did! Time for popcorn!" -ratdude747 -
Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
typical fault in ECS MCP61SM-AM (used in HP and Acer)
The OST and TK failed when the computer had more or less 60,000h.
I just failed with 70,000h (the HDD is original, and marks 70,000h of use, because its owner never turned it off).
Interestingly, all g-luxon are fine: O
But I'll be honest, I'm impressed that this board has endured so many hours, and the chipset being an nforce with IGPU has never failed the FCBGA.Gaming pc:
nVidia RTX 3080 TI, Corsair RM750I.
Workshop PC:
Intel core i5 8400, Intel SSD 256GB, nvidia gt1030, asus b365-a.
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Must have been the right force, because that instantly fixed the USB 2.0 issues.
Now working fine again. And the LAN port has been a lot less problematic at cold boot.
So solution for faulty/dieing GeForce 6100/6150 chipsets: punch them!But not too hard
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.
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Or just put a 40 mm fan on it, to prevent all of that, if possible.
Last edited by momaka; 04-25-2019, 09:56 PM.Comment
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I'm not a expert, I'm just doing my best.Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Mine failed at a little less than that. Also, my board had TK, OST, and Sanyo WF caps. Despite Sanyo being considered a good brand, their WF series are problematic - same as other early ultra-low ESR Japanese cap series, like United Chemicon KZG/KZJ (and Rubycon MCZ to an extent.) The OST caps were RLS, IIRC, so they didn't have issues. Still, I recapped most of mine preemptively.
Maybe it ran in a cooler environment/ambient? I can tell you that at "standard" room temperature of 77F / 25C, the chipset HS gets scorching hot and certainly won't last long. Mine's starting to fail - it looses the LAN port on cold boot if room temperature is below 64F / 18C. Also had the USB ports panic last summer, hogging all the system interrupts with requests (and bogging the CPU down.) After disabling Enhanced USB (USB 2.0 capability), the interrupt panics stopped. Re-enabling Enhanced USB controller brought back the panics. Eventually, I got mad at the thing and punched the chipset HS.Must have been the right force, because that instantly fixed the USB 2.0 issues.
Now working fine again. And the LAN port has been a lot less problematic at cold boot.
So solution for faulty/dieing GeForce 6100/6150 chipsets: punch them!But not too hard
.
.
.
Or just put a 40 mm fan on it, to prevent all of that, if possible.
Caps developed by the CIA? LOLMy Computer: AMD Ryzen 9 3900X, Asrock X370 Killer SLI/AC, 32GB G.SKILL TRIDENT Z RGB DDR4 3200, 500GB WD Black NVME and 2TB Toshiba HD,Geforce RTX 3080 FOUNDERS Edition, In-Win 303 White, EVGA SuperNova 750 G3, Windows 10 ProComment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Mine failed at a little less than that. Also, my board had TK, OST, and Sanyo WF caps. Despite Sanyo being considered a good brand, their WF series are problematic - same as other early ultra-low ESR Japanese cap series, like United Chemicon KZG/KZJ (and Rubycon MCZ to an extent.) The OST caps were RLS, IIRC, so they didn't have issues. Still, I recapped most of mine preemptively.
Also, lately I've found the early batches of WG and even WX to age poorly, and fail with high leakage current, just like HM, HN, and HZ. In my experience, as far as early ultra low ESR caps go, only MBZ and FJ/FL seem to be safe (even though they're not impervious to failure, but what cap is?). As far as early “mid grade low ESR” caps go, I've had excellent experiences with Rubycon ZL, NCC KZE, and Panasonic FM (which is corroborated by them doing well in Pete's torture tests from 10+ years ago). Nichicon HD less so but I find they are generally much better than the problematic UESR series mentioned above.
That said... I will still take all the above series over Sacon FZ.Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
I currently have a PC set aside with a motherboard full of leaking capacitors, most of the caps are Sanyo WF and OST RLX and just about all of the sanyo WF caps are bulging/leaking while all of the OST caps look fine.I'm not a expert, I'm just doing my best.Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Mine failed at a little less than that. Also, my board had TK, OST, and Sanyo WF caps. Despite Sanyo being considered a good brand, their WF series are problematic - same as other early ultra-low ESR Japanese cap series, like United Chemicon KZG/KZJ (and Rubycon MCZ to an extent.) The OST caps were RLS, IIRC, so they didn't have issues. Still, I recapped most of mine preemptively.
Maybe it ran in a cooler environment/ambient? I can tell you that at "standard" room temperature of 77F / 25C, the chipset HS gets scorching hot and certainly won't last long. Mine's starting to fail - it looses the LAN port on cold boot if room temperature is below 64F / 18C. Also had the USB ports panic last summer, hogging all the system interrupts with requests (and bogging the CPU down.) After disabling Enhanced USB (USB 2.0 capability), the interrupt panics stopped. Re-enabling Enhanced USB controller brought back the panics. Eventually, I got mad at the thing and punched the chipset HS.Must have been the right force, because that instantly fixed the USB 2.0 issues.
Now working fine again. And the LAN port has been a lot less problematic at cold boot.
So solution for faulty/dieing GeForce 6100/6150 chipsets: punch them!But not too hard
.
.
.
Or just put a 40 mm fan on it, to prevent all of that, if possible.
Caps developed by the CIA? LOL
Thanks for the warning, I'll keep it in mind.
If I tell the truth, I do not know what environment it was in, but it was in an Acer case, it was probably working at a low temperature.
I do the same to the problematic chips, you put them on a fan and surprisingly the useful life is very long.
had a gt8300 with passive heatsink of the defective series, I put a fan and never failed.
Surely the company used industrial espionage to obtain the formula for the capacitor.Last edited by kevin!; 04-26-2019, 06:57 AM.Gaming pc:
nVidia RTX 3080 TI, Corsair RM750I.
Workshop PC:
Intel core i5 8400, Intel SSD 256GB, nvidia gt1030, asus b365-a.
Server:
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Sounds like what I had to do on a Fujitsu-Siemens Amillo D7820 - SIS961 southbridge was half dead - literally took a hammer to it, and somehow the whole laptop came back to life, and worked for a long time before finally the LCD inverter board died with glorious sparks. Initially ran 98SE then XP SP3 towards its end of life.Main rig:
Gigabyte B75M-D3H
Core i5-3470 3.60GHz
Gigabyte Geforce GTX650 1GB GDDR5
16GB DDR3-1600
Samsung SH-224AB DVD-RW
FSP Bluestorm II 500W (recapped)
120GB ADATA + 2x Seagate Barracuda ES.2 ST31000340NS 1TB
Delux MG760 case
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
It's weird to think that my time as the Torquemada of Capacitors was that many years and two employers ago. It was fun, but the commute was ~75 miles a day,.
PeteS in CA
Power Supplies should be boring: No loud noises, no bright flashes, and no bad smells.
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
MCZ/MFZ is fine, as long as they aren't or weren't overheated previously.
)
Might explain why ASUS CUR-DLS has had issues. A year ago, it got corrupt CMOS settings and couldn't detect the SCSI controller until CMOS was reset. Fixed that and it worked for a while. Now it no longer POSTs properly (or rather, hangs after POST.) Maybe it's time to go back where it came from?Shame, because it's a dual-P3 board with on-board SCSI. No AGP slot, though.
Also, one could argue that Panasonic FR and FM are reasonably close in specs to UESR series like KZG, HM, and MBZ. So for recapping old motherboards with big caps, I think FR and FM is a pretty safe bet.
Sacon FZ is literally cat urine in a can, waiting to boil, pop, and fizz (FZZZZ... oh, now I get the series name.)
That said, if the PC you were working on had a GF6100/6150 chipset, expect it to do poorly for HD video acceleration. I rebuilt a system like that with Athlon II X2 215 last week, and it couldn't do 720p video @ 60 FPS very smoothly on YouTube. Added an old GeForce 8600 GT video card in the system, and even that outdated GPU helped off-load the CPU a lot more.
Sounds like what I had to do on a Fujitsu-Siemens Amillo D7820 - SIS961 southbridge was half dead - literally took a hammer to it, and somehow the whole laptop came back to life, and worked for a long time before finally the LCD inverter board died with glorious sparks. Initially ran 98SE then XP SP3 towards its end of life.
Sometimes, the best fixes are the most simple ones.
Speaking of which, I just found out that one "dead" mobo I had sitting for years is actually OK. After literally checking everything on it and trying whatnot, I decided to press hard on the CPU socket (s775 BGA). Welp, that did it - mobo POSTed as if nothing was wrong with it. I released pressure from CPU socket area, and it was "dead" again. Repeated once more, just to confirm.
Bleh. Screw BGA sockets!Comment
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ASRock B550 PG Velocita
Ryzen 9 "Vermeer" 5900X
32 GB G.Skill RipJaws V F4-3200C16D-32GVR
Arc A770 16 GB
eVGA Supernova G3 750W
Western Digital Black SN850 1TB NVMe SSD
Alienware AW3423DWF OLED
"¡Me encanta "Me Encanta o Enlistarlo con Hilary Farr!" -Mí mismo
"There's nothing more unattractive than a chick smoking a cigarette" -Topcat
"Today's lesson in pissivity comes in the form of a ziplock baggie full of GPU extension brackets & hardware that for the last ~3 years have been on my bench, always in my way, getting moved around constantly....and yesterday I found myself in need of them....and the bastards are now nowhere to be found! Motherfracker!!" -Topcat
"did I see a chair fly? I think I did! Time for popcorn!" -ratdude747Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Sanyo’s WF series has issues with long-term reliability. I would not deem Sanyo (Suncon) a bad brand just because of that one series. I’ve seen quite a few ECS motherboards from 2009~2010, loaded with 1800uF 6.3V Sanyo WF and a few 1000uF 6.3V Sanyo WG. The Sanyo WF seem to fail quite often while the WG seem to be okay, along with the rest of the caps. I guess you could chalk this up to the WF being in more stressful locations (on the output of buck regulators, high ripple current duty), but I take it as more of an indication that the WF series is just plain unreliable.Last edited by Wester547; 04-27-2019, 01:55 PM.Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
I just hope the WFs aren't resleeved Samxon GFs!ASRock B550 PG Velocita
Ryzen 9 "Vermeer" 5900X
32 GB G.Skill RipJaws V F4-3200C16D-32GVR
Arc A770 16 GB
eVGA Supernova G3 750W
Western Digital Black SN850 1TB NVMe SSD
Alienware AW3423DWF OLED
"¡Me encanta "Me Encanta o Enlistarlo con Hilary Farr!" -Mí mismo
"There's nothing more unattractive than a chick smoking a cigarette" -Topcat
"Today's lesson in pissivity comes in the form of a ziplock baggie full of GPU extension brackets & hardware that for the last ~3 years have been on my bench, always in my way, getting moved around constantly....and yesterday I found myself in need of them....and the bastards are now nowhere to be found! Motherfracker!!" -Topcat
"did I see a chair fly? I think I did! Time for popcorn!" -ratdude747Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
The Design is too often overlooked when the Cap goes bad...
That Teapo SC go bad in a Flex ATX PSU, after ~7-10 Years should be obvious, shouldn't it?
That's a General Purpose capacitor...
Anyway, LZP is a bit above Teapo SC (wich is/was 2000h in 10mm if downsize IIRC), LZP can be double that.
LZG is even better than that and has at a bare minimum 4000h lifetime.Comment
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Re: The Hall of Shame - Badcaps Photo Montage
Teapo SEK on a Motherboard? :|
That's a General Purpose capacitor...
Anyway, LZP is a bit above Teapo SC (wich is/was 2000h in 10mm if downsize IIRC), LZP can be double that.
LZG is even better than that and has at a bare minimum 4000h lifetime.Comment
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