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    Dell Precision 380

    Hello friends,


    Today's project is a Precision 380 motherboard. It's a "newer" machine, at least I'd consider it to be that (even getting on at 8 years old now...) in comparison to the more commonly plagued Precisions.

    Quick side note: I have a Precision 390 as well (Core 2 Duo board as opposed to the 380's Pentium D/4 board and 955 chipset) and It had four blown caps right in the center of the board. It would restart *with error beep* (note!) and was absolutely random on whether it would detect any stick of ram in any slot at any given time. Replaced those four caps and it has been running nonstop for a good month now.
    When it would die and beep, it was useless until you removed power (or held the button) and tried again. This also left a log in the BIOS that a "Thermal event has occurred" (if I remember correctly) which was bogus, the thing was spotless and had fresh Arctic Silver everywhere!

    This 380 has a similar problem. A machine new to me, I slapped a hard drive in it and popped in the Dell Win XP disk. It didn't even make it past the file loading sequence before a faint click click... and it rebooted.
    However, there was NO error message (diagnostic LED sequence) or new item in the diag log (BIOS). Just like you'd hit the restart button (if it had one of those).
    Look in the center of the motherboard (nearly identical, again only chipset appears different) and whaddya know - four perfectly-good-looking Rubycon MCZ caps. Wait... Huh?
    I have attempted to run Memtest86 (and +) and other memory tests, and it will reboot within a few seconds of the start. Never errors, just reboots.

    Power supply appears fine but it is cramped and I can't see the actual cap brands.

    Every cap on the board *looks* fine, but of course that might not be the case. Fortunately (or unfortunately, however you look at it) there are nine Chemicon KZG caps, two are located near the 4-pin 12v connector, four are below the CPU but obviously not quite in direct contact with it, and the other three are hiding between some of the PCI/PCI-e slots.

    I hear these KZGs are bad. Heck, the post thread below me at this moment is for an XPS with similar cap choices. I also found a blog post a bit ago (and now lost it...) where the writer replaces four KZGs (with nice shiny flat tops, lookin' good) to repair a motherboard (however these were right next to the CPU).
    EDIT: I just found one of the bad/replaced caps from the 390 I spoke of, and it is a Chemicon KZJ.

    I'm going to look for replacements today and see how that goes. I definitely want to get all of those out of there if they're -that- bad.
    There's some other small Chemicons scattered around the board, but they're all KY. I'll leave those be for now.
    EDIT: Dur... The two black Chemicons in the top right are KZJ. For some reason it didn't click earlier. Looks like they gotta go, too!

    Pictures attached.
    Attached Files
    Last edited by alecjahn; 01-09-2015, 11:20 AM.

    #2
    Re: Dell Precision 380

    did you also look in the psu?

    Comment


      #3
      Re: Dell Precision 380

      Yeah. It looks fine... but hard to really see much in it (packed tight). I need to check the pinouts and see if a generic could be swapped-in for testing (but I seem to recall Dell doing some funky stuff at times).

      I also put in a wimpy video card and removed the hard drive/CD-Rom altogether, and booted Memtest from a usb drive, just to try the most limited-power setup, but the same results. Figured that might have been a good enough test for now.
      Last edited by alecjahn; 01-09-2015, 11:33 AM.

      Comment


        #4
        Re: Dell Precision 380

        That computer should take a normal PSU the Dell one is just physically larger. But the ATX will screw right in.

        Comment


          #5
          Re: Dell Precision 380

          Little update. I did a lot of digging and came up with some cap combinations that were suitable for temporary/test replacement. However, they're not the quality I would want to use permanently.
          I swapped them onto the board and was able to install Windows in full on this machine without a problem. Even tossed a thirsty video card and it seems to be solid (remember, earlier, it would die before the Windows DVD was even finished loading to memory). I'm going to call it a day for now, but this has given me enough of a boost to order proper caps. Which I just did from you fine people. Thanks!

          I'll chime-in again when they arrive and are installed!

          Comment


            #6
            Re: Dell Precision 380

            Sorry to revive this old thread, but I have a similar story of a Precision 390 that I had to swap some caps on.

            I have an old Precision 390 that I got pretty cheap as part of a corporate auction. It's a pretty decent machine, Core 2 Duo E6600, 4GB of ECC DDR2, etc. I have it set up on my mess of a workbench down in the basement, where I mostly use it for datasheet lookups, quick calculations, etc. It also takes part in primegrid challenges, and serves as the VNC client for a headless machine that also takes part in the aforementioned primegrid challenges. Every February, primegrid runs a month long prime finding challenge.

            About halfway through February, I found that this machine was no longer grabbing work from and reporting results to the server. I went downstairs to find that it had bluescreened with a not-really-that-helpful "hardware failure" message. I restarted it, and it came back up OK and began working right where it left off. I blamed it on a transient power event or something similar.

            Two days later, I found it had once again stopped contacting the server. This time I opened the side up, and found a cap on the motherboard puking its guts out. The cap is visible just south of center in this picture:


            I then proceeded to disassemble the machine, to get the motherboard out. This cap is a UCC KZJ 6.3V 1800uF, and from what I can tell is on the high side of the 5VSB Southbridge VRM. There are three more just like it; one additional one on the high side of this VRM, and two on the low side. Here's another picture from after I got the board out, that shows them nicely:


            I looked up the KZJ specs, and found them to be equivalent to Rubycon MCZ. I looked through my drawers of caps and found a handful of exact replacements - MCZ 6.3V 1800uF. I cranked up my soldering iron, and swapped them out. Here's an after picture:


            It occurred to me that since this PC remains on all of the time, there shouldn't have been much load on this particular VRM (it being the standby VRM after all - although all of the heat from the CPU heatsink does blow over these caps - nice job with the BTX design, guys), so I checked on the caps in the power supply. Unfortunately, due the huge tangle of wires, and the inability of me to get the board completely out of the case, there are no pictures. Anyway, I found a slightly bulged OST on the +12V rail, and a mixture of OK looking OST and Ltec caps on the rest of the rails. Back to my cap drawers, I found some suitable replacements, all Panasonic FC. Here are the exact replacements:

            +5vSB:
            1500uF @ 10v OST RLP + 470uF @ 10v Ltec LZP -> 2200uF 10v Panasonic FC + 1000uF 10v Panasonic FC

            +3.3v:
            3300uF @ 6.3v OST RLP + 2200uF @ 6.3v OST RLP -> 2x 2700uF @ 6.3v Panasonic FC

            +5v:
            2x 2200uF @ 10v OST RLP -> 2x 2200uF @ 10v Panasonic FC

            +12v1:
            2200uF @ 16v OST RLP (bulged) + 120uF @ 16v Ltec LZP (yes, that's 120uF, not 1200uF) -> 3300uF @ 16v Panasonic FC + 180uF @ 16v Panasonic FC

            +12v2:
            680uF @ 16v Ltec LZP + 120uF @ 16v OST RLP -> 680uF @ 16v Panasonic FC + 180uF @ 16v Panasonic FC

            You might think that that 12v arrangement is a little strange. I agree. I don't recall the exact configuration, but I believe the two rails did have separate diode packs on the heatsink, and different filters, but were then connected by a shunt. Both rails are rated for 18A. Not sure exactly what they were thinking when the designed that... the power supply model number is L375P-00, and was built by Lite-On. It's seems like a pretty solid PSU, except for the not so good cap choices. To be fair, though, the datecodes on these caps indicate early 2007, so it lasted a good long time before there were any issues.

            If I find myself back in the power supply for any reason, I'll take some pics and figure out the exact layout of the 12v rails.

            Anyway, I did notice a couple OK looking UCC KZG caps on the motherboard as well, and so once February ended, I pulled the system apart again and replaced them too. I didn't take any before shots, but the two groups are highlighted in alecjahn's first picture: the three near the expansion slots in the south-west corner, and the group of 4 shorties in the north by north-west area. On my board, the two groups in the north-east corner are Rubycon MBZ (CPU VRM high) and Sanyo WG (RAM VRM high). I decided to leave these, and only replace the KZGs.

            And, since those shortie caps are shorties because the CPU heatsink wind tunnel gets in the way, I replaced them with polymers. UCC LG series, to be exact. 16v again, but I actually was able to increase the capacitance from 680uF each to 820uF each.

            The three by the expansion slots got replaced with polymer caps too, UCC PSC series this time, 470uF @ 16v (same as the originals).

            Here's an after picture (you can see the Rubies and Sanyos in the SW corner, new CPU polies SSE, and new PCIe polies in the NE area):


            And here's a closeup of the new CPU caps:


            This machine has been idling with no issues since, and another primegrid challenge started today, so I'll get a solid week of full blast stress testing. I don't imagine I'll have any trouble in the future, but if I do I'll be sure to report back.
            Attached Files

            Comment


              #7
              Re: Dell Precision 380

              Old thread, but still relevant. The best Dell BTX systems seem to be the Precision T3400 and T3500 - they have pretty much bulletproof mobos with polymers in the VRM, Rubycons and Pansonic elsewhere. BTX is already over-engineered with good airflow, heavy heatsinks and shortened cable-lengths for 130W TDP processors. With 80 to 100W TDP quad-cores, they run reliably for years if not decades, and are available at resale for very little money. I just took in 3 units of T3400 with X38 chipset and C2D proccys which I'm upgrading to C2Q and Quadro GPUs. Two of them seem to have ECC DDR2, while another has stock desktop DDR2-800 (which is readily available here anyway - 8 GB (4x 2GB) runs to about $20, new with 1 yr warranty).

              In short, don't overlook the BTX S775 and later workstations from Dell, HP and a few others. They can use stock ATX PSUs, and are generally very well-engineered, and are often available for pennies on resale due to corporate upgrades.

              Comment


                #8
                Re: Dell Precision 380

                I second the T3400 suggestion.
                They can be overclocked easily with an unlocked CPU and Throttlestop 6.0 software in Windows. QX9650 goes 4.15GHz easily. Actual RAM capacity is 16GB but non RDIMM 4GB DDR2 is hard to find. Hidden support for 400fsb is also reported on the X38 chipset. I think DDR2-1066 is supported also, but again these are scarce, and 4GB I haven't seen any. Dual GPU support too.
                You can pick up a whole system for what a decent LGA775 overclocking MB is going for.
                Here's one at 4Ghz.
                https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/14900919
                The T3500 isn't a true BTX, But the cooling layout is the same in principle. Unlocked 4 and6 core W series Xeons can be OC and the 3 channel DDR3 can keep up with newer systems.
                Here's one at 4.1Ghz 6 core.
                https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/19711899
                Last edited by Retrorockit; 02-24-2020, 09:58 AM.

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