Someone called yesterday about this board. Told me he made the big mistake of letting the board auto set its voltages when overclocking, and it worked for 2 hours then died. Would shut down the power supply when the EATX 8-pin connector was plugged in.
I asked him to repeat the test without the CPU. He reported that it did the same thing, so i said the CPU has likely survived, and the board is at fault. Told him to bring it in.
When the CPU was installed, the 12v EATX connector read about 5 ohms to ground. Not a dead short, but pretty close. Seemed fine with the CPU out, but i was sure it wasn't, so i started probing the MOSFETs. All FETs in plain sight checked out okay, so i decided to remove the VRM heatsink and take a look. Sure enough, a group of 5 MOSFETs on the high side read shorted drain to source.
Murphy's law applies, the shorted FET was the last one i pulled. They were FPH7030L btw, i soldered the good ones back on. I happened to have an Infineon part on hand, which was close enough to the original. Thought it would work for a test.
Dropped the CPU back in, and sure enough, the 12v EATX connector didn't read shorted anymore. Put the video card in and it fired right up.
I told him to keep it at stock for now, the original MOSFETs are no longer manufactured, so i will be ordering a bunch of PSMN4R4 which are superior in all aspects, and they're 75 cents each. I'll be swapping the entire high-side of the VRM.
I asked him to repeat the test without the CPU. He reported that it did the same thing, so i said the CPU has likely survived, and the board is at fault. Told him to bring it in.
When the CPU was installed, the 12v EATX connector read about 5 ohms to ground. Not a dead short, but pretty close. Seemed fine with the CPU out, but i was sure it wasn't, so i started probing the MOSFETs. All FETs in plain sight checked out okay, so i decided to remove the VRM heatsink and take a look. Sure enough, a group of 5 MOSFETs on the high side read shorted drain to source.
Murphy's law applies, the shorted FET was the last one i pulled. They were FPH7030L btw, i soldered the good ones back on. I happened to have an Infineon part on hand, which was close enough to the original. Thought it would work for a test.
Dropped the CPU back in, and sure enough, the 12v EATX connector didn't read shorted anymore. Put the video card in and it fired right up.
