New caps on motherboard hot

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  • jayjr1105
    Badcaps Veteran
    • Jan 2018
    • 281
    • United States

    #1

    New caps on motherboard hot

    Motherboard is Intel DQ35JO. They have notoriously bad caps below the 24 pin ATX connector (1800uf 6.3v Rubycon MCZ). I successfully replaced both with 2200uf 10v Panasonic FM's. Ran stress tests on the system for several hours and even with the system idle, the caps are measuring 45c on the vent with my k type probe using a multimeter.

    I never knew caps to be hot to the touch like this before. Normal?

    Yes I know the new caps are 12mm vs 8mm old and it looks bad but there in there good and working.
    Attached Files
    Last edited by jayjr1105; 03-03-2018, 09:02 AM.
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    Ryzen 3600x
    16GB Patriot 3600MHz
    MSI B450 Gaming Plus
    MSI Air Boost Vega 56
    Acer 32" 1440P Freesync
    Rosewill Capstone 750W
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    Hakko FX-888D Station
    FX-8802 Iron
    MG Chem .8mm 63/37 RA 2.2%
  • dmill89
    Badcaps Legend
    • Dec 2011
    • 2534
    • USA

    #2
    Re: New caps on motherboard hot

    The FMs have higher ESR than the MCZs you replaced (18 mOhm vs. 12 mOhm) which would cause them to run hotter. I also imagine the original MCZs were running fairly hot to begin with to fail (Rubycon MBZ/MCZ rarely fail unless they are heavily stressed).

    Comment

    • stj
      Great Sage 齊天大聖
      • Dec 2009
      • 31015
      • Albion

      #3
      Re: New caps on motherboard hot

      MCZ was the best of the best - and no longer made.
      you must use poly's now.

      Comment

      • jayjr1105
        Badcaps Veteran
        • Jan 2018
        • 281
        • United States

        #4
        Re: New caps on motherboard hot

        Originally posted by dmill89
        The FMs have higher ESR than the MCZs you replaced (18 mOhm vs. 12 mOhm) which would cause them to run hotter. I also imagine the original MCZs were running fairly hot to begin with to fail (Rubycon MBZ/MCZ rarely fail unless they are heavily stressed).
        Originally posted by stj
        MCZ was the best of the best - and no longer made.
        you must use poly's now.
        I checked the leads with a meter and it was around 5v. With only a 6.3v cap, I guess that could be why the first ones blew up. Also, I checked the ESR of a new Panasonic 10v 2200uf and it was .03ohm
        --------------------------------------------------------------
        Ryzen 3600x
        16GB Patriot 3600MHz
        MSI B450 Gaming Plus
        MSI Air Boost Vega 56
        Acer 32" 1440P Freesync
        Rosewill Capstone 750W
        --------------------------------------------------------------
        Hakko FX-888D Station
        FX-8802 Iron
        MG Chem .8mm 63/37 RA 2.2%

        Comment

        • dmill89
          Badcaps Legend
          • Dec 2011
          • 2534
          • USA

          #5
          Re: New caps on motherboard hot

          Originally posted by stj
          MCZ was the best of the best - and no longer made.
          you must use poly's now.
          Unfortunately good motherboard grade electrolytic caps are becoming very hard to come by (since most newer boards are using polymers there isn't much demand anymore).

          It looks like DigiKey still has Nichicon HZs in the 1800uf 6.3V size available (9mOhm/.009 ohm impedance) which would be a sutible replacement for MCZs, but that series has been discontinued as well and availability is likely limited to existing stock.

          Originally posted by jayjr1105
          I checked the ESR of a new Panasonic 10v 2200uf and it was .03ohm
          Seems a bit on the high side per the specs of those caps .018ohm, but still close enough it could just be meter variance. In any case those FMs are low-ESR caps primarily intended for use in devices like SMPS (switch-mode power-supplies), TVs, etc. while the MCZs are Ultra-Low ESR caps intended for use on motherboards (as are the Nichicon HZs linked above as well as HMs/HNs, etc.).

          Comment

          • jayjr1105
            Badcaps Veteran
            • Jan 2018
            • 281
            • United States

            #6
            Re: New caps on motherboard hot

            Originally posted by dmill89
            Unfortunately good motherboard grade electrolytic caps are becoming very hard to come by (since most newer boards are using polymers there isn't much demand anymore).

            It looks like DigiKey still has Nichicon HZs in the 1800uf 6.3V size available (9mOhm/.009 ohm impedance) which would be a sutible replacement for MCZs, but that series has been discontinued as well and availability is likely limited to existing stock.



            Seems a bit on the high side per the specs of those caps .018ohm, but still close enough it could just be meter variance. In any case those FMs are low-ESR caps primarily intended for use in devices like SMPS (switch-mode power-supplies), TVs, etc. while the MCZs are Ultra-Low ESR caps intended for use on motherboards (as are the Nichicon HZs linked above as well as HMs/HNs, etc.).
            Could be meter variance. Just tested again and it was .01 (only measures two digits after the decimal). Being they are slightly larger caps and 10v, I think they will be fine. Not like I need this board to last 5 more years.
            --------------------------------------------------------------
            Ryzen 3600x
            16GB Patriot 3600MHz
            MSI B450 Gaming Plus
            MSI Air Boost Vega 56
            Acer 32" 1440P Freesync
            Rosewill Capstone 750W
            --------------------------------------------------------------
            Hakko FX-888D Station
            FX-8802 Iron
            MG Chem .8mm 63/37 RA 2.2%

            Comment

            • Stefan Payne
              Badcaps Legend
              • Dec 2009
              • 1267
              • Germany

              #7
              Re: New caps on motherboard hot

              Just use Kemet A750 caps instead. They are dirt cheap and good replacements for KZG and other wet Ultra Low ESR types because they are rather shitty Polys with rather high ESR...

              Comment

              • CapSwapper
                Senior Member
                • Feb 2014
                • 69
                • USA

                #8
                Re: New caps on motherboard hot

                my advice is dump that motherboard. new motherboards don't cost a fortune and they all have polymers

                Comment

                • dmill89
                  Badcaps Legend
                  • Dec 2011
                  • 2534
                  • USA

                  #9
                  Re: New caps on motherboard hot

                  Originally posted by CapSwapper
                  my advice is dump that motherboard. new motherboards don't cost a fortune and they all have polymers
                  New LGA775 boards are a bit hard to come by these days (granted it isn't too difficult to find used higher-end ones with polymer caps on eBay fairly cheap, but even a "good" 7+ year old used motherboard has some risk, especially LGA sockets that are easily damaged in shipping if no packaged properly), and the few that still exist are aimed at the budget replacement market and don't have all polymer caps (such as this ASRock board with polymers on the VRM, but OST electrolytics everywhere else). A new board (at least one with all polymer caps) would likely mean a new CPU and new RAM as well.

                  Comment

                  • toldim79
                    New Member
                    • Mar 2018
                    • 2
                    • Ireland

                    #10
                    Re: New caps on motherboard hot

                    Hy, I would go with it RNL1C182MDS1, it is significantly more expensive but at least has an 8 mOhm ESR. However, i would check the temperature of the MOSFET which is sitting relatively close to the capacitor.

                    http://ie.farnell.com/nichicon/rnl1c...rad/dp/2807386
                    Last edited by toldim79; 03-17-2018, 09:37 AM. Reason: missing link

                    Comment

                    • john111
                      Member
                      • Mar 2018
                      • 10
                      • britain

                      #11
                      Re: New caps on motherboard hot

                      Have you thought about going even higher voltage handling caps

                      Comment

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