Blown cap
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Re: Blown cap
interesting! its leaking gold coloured stuff? lol! might it be iron pyrite or fool's gold? rofl!Comment
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Re: Blown cap
That ooze almost looks like the tan/brown glue that goes conductive. But I don't see that kind of glue anywhere else on the board, so I don't think that is it. Very surprising that it is leaking out of the positive terminal. As stj said, usually they do it on the negative one. And yeah, that very likely be the reason for not getting power. Just hope nothing else has blown when that cap went.
Also curious what brand of capacitor is that?Comment
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Re: Blown cap
That ooze almost looks like the tan/brown glue that goes conductive. But I don't see that kind of glue anywhere else on the board, so I don't think that is it. Very surprising that it is leaking out of the positive terminal. As stj said, usually they do it on the negative one. And yeah, that very likely be the reason for not getting power. Just hope nothing else has blown when that cap went.
Also curious what brand of capacitor is that?--------------------------------------------------------------
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Re: Blown cap
Indeed, I've also seen failed Taicon primaries. I have actually seen more failed primaries than secondary caps from them. I would say failure rate for primaries is about on par as with Samxon, especially if in APFC.Comment
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Re: Blown cap
Well, APFC is a whole another story. Even good Japanese caps fail there sometimes, particularly if the manufacturer penny-pinched and used 85C -rated caps instead of 105C -rated caps... and also 400V caps instead of 420V or 450V caps. Going with 105C caps for higher rated voltage means bigger caps - which is quite necessary, because APFC puts more stress on the caps (lower ripple current than at 50/60 Hz, but at much higher frequency, so the end result is more stress on the caps than caps simply getting rectified DC straight from the line at 50/60 Hz.)Comment
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