MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • ferbfletcher
    New Member
    • Sep 2012
    • 6
    • usa

    #1

    MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

    I replaced caps on a MS-7548, as indicated in the other MS-7548 thread. https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=14659

    However, after replacing all of the TK caps, it still won't post.

    After pressing the power button, the CPU fan spins for about 1 second and then it stops. No post, no beeps, no video. The power supply turns on and the hard drive spins up. I also tried another known-working power supply.

    This was the same symptom before replacing caps.

    Are there any components that could have gotten damaged by the bad TK caps?

    For pictures, see https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=14659 my board and caps look exactly like that.

    I replaced all the ones around the CPU, then there were some on the other sides that got replaced as well. They were all 6.3v 1800uf brown TK caps.

    Any ideas?
  • mockingbird
    Badcaps Legend
    • Dec 2008
    • 5484
    • -

    #2
    Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

    1) What did you use to replace them?
    2) Did you address all the other off-brand caps on the motherboard, and not just the VRM caps?
    3) Seeing as how this motherboard comes off an HP Tower, I'm assuming that you have a Bestec PSU in there... Given the age of this machine, you should really have a look inside the power supply, or consider getting a brand new power supply completely.

    If you don't want to fiddle with the power supply, Newegg has the Seasonic S12-II 380 for $50 shipped: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817151072

    Comment

    • ferbfletcher
      New Member
      • Sep 2012
      • 6
      • usa

      #3
      Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

      I replaced all of the TK 6.3 1800uf caps, as they were all buldging and leaking badly. I replaced them all with Panasonic FL 6.3v 1800uf.

      i replaced 9 around the CPU, and 6 elsewhere on the board.

      All the other caps appear to be okay, and they are not TK (except for some very tiny one's that might be, but they are not buldging or leaking.) Those would be quite difficult to replace, as they are very small.

      About the power supply... I have another known-working power supply that I am also trying on it, so the power supply is not the issue.

      The board is getting power, because the CPU and other chipsets warm up, but the CPU fan stops after 1 second, and there is no post, no video. Monitor stays asleep.

      The power light comes on, and I can power off the power supply by holding the computer power button in for a few seconds.

      Comment

      • mockingbird
        Badcaps Legend
        • Dec 2008
        • 5484
        • -

        #4
        Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

        Does the fan twitch, or does the fan spin and then stop after one second? Where did you get your Panasonic FL from (Important to know, since you may have bought fakes)?

        Comment

        • c_hegge
          Badcaps Legend
          • Sep 2009
          • 5219
          • Australia

          #5
          Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

          I think he is saying that the CPU fan stops after a second, but the PSU and other parts like the drives keep running. I doubt if it's a shorted FET.
          I love putting bad caps and flat batteries in fire and watching them explode!!

          No wonder it doesn't work! You installed the jumper wires backwards

          Main PC: Core i7 3770K 3.5GHz, Gigabyte GA-Z77M-D3H-MVP, 8GB Kingston HyperX DDR3 1600, 240GB Intel 335 Series SSD, 750GB WD HDD, Sony Optiarc DVD RW, Palit nVidia GTX660 Ti, CoolerMaster N200 Case, Delta DPS-600MB 600W PSU, Hauppauge TV Tuner, Windows 7 Home Premium

          Office PC: HP ProLiant ML150 G3, 2x Xeon E5335 2GHz, 4GB DDR2 RAM, 120GB Intel 530 SSD, 2x 250GB HDD, 2x 450GB 15K SAS HDD in RAID 1, 1x 2TB HDD, nVidia 8400GS, Delta DPS-650BB 650W PSU, Windows 7 Pro

          Comment

          • ferbfletcher
            New Member
            • Sep 2012
            • 6
            • usa

            #6
            Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

            Originally posted by mockingbird
            Does the fan twitch, or does the fan spin and then stop after one second? Where did you get your Panasonic FL from (Important to know, since you may have bought fakes)?
            When I plug in the power cable, the fan spins for just a tiny instant, as it does on many computers.

            When I push the power button, it spins for a bit longer, like a full second, then it stops spinning (as though it started to run, but then something causes it to power off).

            If I power it without RAM, it does the exact same thing. I've tried other ram sticks in other slots to eliminate the chance of bad RAM.

            Where did I get the Panasonic FL from? I don't remember. They are some I had, they came from some electronics store.

            They are black with gold printing.

            Some of them have a "squished" [M] logo, like it is much shorter than it should be. The same width, but not as tall (the logoo). They aren't all that way, but some are. Does that definately mean fake? Or do real ones sometimes vary in printing like that? They are all in the same cardboard roll, so they all came together.

            They all have a strip of red lettering down the side, it says 47VVK


            Anyway, is there somewhere on this motherboard that I should check for certain voltages?
            Last edited by ferbfletcher; 09-06-2012, 07:41 AM.

            Comment

            • mockingbird
              Badcaps Legend
              • Dec 2008
              • 5484
              • -

              #7
              Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

              Whichc electronics store would stock Panasonic FL? Most likely they are fake, but post a picture.

              Comment

              • ferbfletcher
                New Member
                • Sep 2012
                • 6
                • usa

                #8
                Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                Here are the pictures.
                Attached Files

                Comment

                • mockingbird
                  Badcaps Legend
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 5484
                  • -

                  #9
                  Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                  In my opinion, they're the real thing. The next thing which comes to question is the quality of your work. Did you do a good job? Did the solder take? Also, check the other caps on the board... I notice a variety of caps scattered throughout, but what I'm particularly interested in are those Toshin Kyogo caps near the memory slots.

                  Comment

                  • ferbfletcher
                    New Member
                    • Sep 2012
                    • 6
                    • usa

                    #10
                    Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                    Originally posted by mockingbird
                    In my opinion, they're the real thing. The next thing which comes to question is the quality of your work. Did you do a good job? Did the solder take? Also, check the other caps on the board... I notice a variety of caps scattered throughout, but what I'm particularly interested in are those Toshin Kyogo caps near the memory slots.
                    There are 4 TK by the memory slots, they are the same as the others, 6.3v 1800uf. I replaced those along with the ones next to the CPU.

                    Also, there are 2 TK to the left of the CPU, and 1 TK to the right of the CPU. Those are also the same, 1800uf 6.3v and I also replaced those at the same time.

                    About the quality of the job. I looked over them all again, and the solder appears to have taken on all of them.

                    I measured the voltage at each cap.

                    At all the ones around the CPU, it was 1.1v

                    The voltage on those around the ram was 1.8v

                    The remaining was 5 volts.

                    Comment

                    • mockingbird
                      Badcaps Legend
                      • Dec 2008
                      • 5484
                      • -

                      #11
                      Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                      Good, you did indeed get them all.

                      1.1v on VRM in or out... Anyone else care to pitch in on this? That doesn't sound right. RAM voltage sounds OK.

                      Comment

                      • Player2
                        Senior Member
                        • Aug 2009
                        • 98
                        • USA

                        #12
                        Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                        Did you ever get anywhere with this board ferb? I'm having the exact same issue- recapped and it still spins the CPU fan for about a second then stops, no POST, no beeps, etc. Will not spin up again until I unplug/replug the PSU.

                        I'm using a known good PSU, CPU, and RAM (all working on another AM2 board.) Replaced the VRM caps with polys, others with Nichicon HZ and HN, everything 6mm and larger were replaced. I also had some FETs that were shorted or reading off, both in and out of circuit. Replaced those, still no change. Any ideas on other things to check? Components that often fail along with FETs?

                        Thanks!

                        Comment

                        • momaka
                          master hoarder
                          • May 2008
                          • 12170
                          • Bulgaria

                          #13
                          Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                          Originally posted by Player2
                          I'm having the exact same issue- recapped and it still spins the CPU fan for about a second then stops, no POST, no beeps, etc. Will not spin up again until I unplug/replug the PSU.
                          Going by that description, there must still be a short circuit somewhere on the board. Check your MOSFETs again. If none appear to be shorted, then the best troubleshooting method would be to start disabling voltage rails on the motherboard one by one (by removing certain MOSFETs or certain pairs of MOSFETs) until the board starts. Shorted ceramic caps can also be responsible for this.

                          Comment

                          • Player2
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 98
                            • USA

                            #14
                            Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                            Well I got it running... Turns out that the CPU fan I was using was not turning enough RPMs (it's an oversized fan/cooler) and the mobo was kicking off immediately- no beeps, no error messages, etc. Once I plugged another fan into the CPU fan header and plugged the CPU fan into the system fan header, it came up and immediately gave me a message that the system fan was failing. Anywho, it's running great now. Guess I missed this because the other board I was using to verify the components had no problem with the CPU fan running 800-1000 RPM.

                            Thanks for the help Momoka, glad it turned out to not be a huge problem! And Ferb, if you're still around, try plugging a different fan into the CPU fan header.

                            Comment

                            • momaka
                              master hoarder
                              • May 2008
                              • 12170
                              • Bulgaria

                              #15
                              Re: MS-7548 Replaced Caps - No Fix

                              Originally posted by Player2
                              Thanks for the help Momoka, glad it turned out to not be a huge problem! And Ferb, if you're still around, try plugging a different fan into the CPU fan header.
                              Well, nothing to thank me for. This is definitely a case where I am glad that you actually didn't follow my advice . Congrats on the fix too!

                              Comment

                              Related Topics

                              Collapse

                              • eryjus
                                Heathkit IO-4205 Power Supply Caps
                                by eryjus
                                Hello,

                                First, I am a complete noob with high voltage stuff. I'm learning, but I need help by someone looking over my shoulder.

                                I recently came into posession of a Heathkit IO-4205 5MHz Dual Trace Oscilloscope. The documentation is copyright 1978. I'm told it works.

                                I opened it up to check the caps before I applied power, and found the following black caps and wanted to know what they were. They are on the power supply board. I was able to read the name and model and came up with, "Nytronics 162J-1, 0.1uF, 20% tolerance, 2000VDC."
                                ...
                                05-10-2023, 11:21 AM
                              • captain150
                                Help with switching power supply caps
                                by captain150
                                I'm trying to repair two old VCRs, they both have bad caps. One has leaky ones, the other would barely run until I subbed in some caps from another power supply I had laying around (though they are the wrong values). This vcr works for an hour or two, but then the power supply starts whining and the picture gets lines in it. I didn't replace all the secondary caps, so another voltage might still be problematic, or the values I used are too far off.
                                I've been on mouser and digikey but the options are a bit overwhelming. I just need some new ones that will work. They don't need to be top quality,...
                                03-16-2025, 07:34 PM
                              • sam_sam_sam
                                Desoldering gun station modified to use a 18 volt @ 20 amp switching power supply
                                by sam_sam_sam
                                I have wanting to do this project for quite sometime now and I finally found a switching power supply that will work on this desoldering gun station ZD-915 that the original switching power supply took a shit and just was not worth trying to fix it because this switching power is not quite big enough to handle the heater element and the vacuum pump

                                One note when I tested the switching power supply and the voltage control board I noticed that this desoldering gun heat up much faster than the original switching power supply which I was really surprised by to the point that I might buy...
                                03-31-2024, 02:12 PM
                              • momaka
                                HannStar Hanns-G HC194d LCD monitor repair
                                by momaka
                                Normally, I never post repairs this quick after I do them, because… I am usually very slow. But today, I’m making an exception here. Why? No idea. Perhaps only because the repair details are still “fresh” in my head… which is ironic, given this is a 16 year old monitor that hardly anyone will care about today. It is new to me, though. I picked it up last November from someone on my local Craigslist. It wasn’t very close to where I live, but was close to a family friend that I had to go visit anyways. So after watching the posting on Craigslist for a few weeks and seeing it getting...
                                03-15-2023, 10:17 PM
                              • Tynan Dill
                                Vizio e601i-A3 - Has Sound and Display, But No Backlight - Bad Power Supply Board or Bad LED Bulbs ?
                                by Tynan Dill
                                I was given this TV from my great uncle. He said it just wouldn't turn on one day out of nowhere, replaced the TV, and gave it to me to possibly fix and use for myself.

                                Upon bringing it home and plugging it up, it showed a standby light.

                                I powered it on and without a flashlight, the display showed the "V" but the lighting is very dim, but visible.

                                The screen seems to blackout and stay black, but with a flashlight I can see the display.

                                With my Playstation 4 connected via HDMI, and running a game I can hear sound.

                                Assuming...
                                11-22-2024, 01:46 PM
                              • Loading...
                              • No more items.
                              Working...