Hi all,
I've just repaired a Samsung BN44-0514A power supply (No Vs or Va, "exploded" QS802, shorted QS804, open RS819 & RS833). Replacing these parts restored Vs and Va and the board is working, at least on the bench with a 100W light globe as the load on Vs.
Removing the MOSFETs was a pain though, each had their legs encased in a large amount of soft white silicone that was cut up and scraped away.
Question: How critical is it to re-encase the legs of the new MOSFETs in silicone?
I'm assuming the silicone is to prevent flashover between legs (the legs are already spread apart on the PCB, including an air-gap slot cut into the PCB between the legs). But given how close the "thick" parts of the legs are immediately underneath the TO-220 case, I find it hard to imagine squirting a bunch of silicone in there would help.
Also, I don't have any silicone
I've just repaired a Samsung BN44-0514A power supply (No Vs or Va, "exploded" QS802, shorted QS804, open RS819 & RS833). Replacing these parts restored Vs and Va and the board is working, at least on the bench with a 100W light globe as the load on Vs.
Removing the MOSFETs was a pain though, each had their legs encased in a large amount of soft white silicone that was cut up and scraped away.
Question: How critical is it to re-encase the legs of the new MOSFETs in silicone?
I'm assuming the silicone is to prevent flashover between legs (the legs are already spread apart on the PCB, including an air-gap slot cut into the PCB between the legs). But given how close the "thick" parts of the legs are immediately underneath the TO-220 case, I find it hard to imagine squirting a bunch of silicone in there would help.
Also, I don't have any silicone

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