So, this came my way recently. A Thermal Master 420W PSU, made by Sun Pro, but it was totally packed with dust.


As you can see, there is a fair amount of dust packed around the switching transistors.
Rather than cleaning and refurbishing the PSU, I decided to use it for an experiment - Could this kind of thing really start a fire? I've long suspected that an exploding transistor could, but never had the chance to prove it. So, I loaded it up to 350W on the tester. This load is actually safe normally (I have load tested a similar PSU before, which managed 350W OK).
After less than a minute, there was a massive explosion, and flames shot out the back grille. The PSU stayed on fire for several seconds...

...which melted the wires on the voltage switch and charred the EMI filter coil somewhat,

melted the airflow baffle,

and gave us some pretty nasty charring on the heat sink. Both of the switchers were just about blown in half.
Thankfully, the fire did self-extinguish after a few seconds, but I certainly wouldn't count on that happening every time, if there was a little more dust in the PSU than what I had here.
As you can see, there is a fair amount of dust packed around the switching transistors.
Rather than cleaning and refurbishing the PSU, I decided to use it for an experiment - Could this kind of thing really start a fire? I've long suspected that an exploding transistor could, but never had the chance to prove it. So, I loaded it up to 350W on the tester. This load is actually safe normally (I have load tested a similar PSU before, which managed 350W OK).
After less than a minute, there was a massive explosion, and flames shot out the back grille. The PSU stayed on fire for several seconds...
...which melted the wires on the voltage switch and charred the EMI filter coil somewhat,
melted the airflow baffle,
and gave us some pretty nasty charring on the heat sink. Both of the switchers were just about blown in half.
Thankfully, the fire did self-extinguish after a few seconds, but I certainly wouldn't count on that happening every time, if there was a little more dust in the PSU than what I had here.
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