MS 6340 - Hissing

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  • alk
    New Member
    • Aug 2006
    • 5

    #1

    MS 6340 - Hissing

    First let me give you the specs of this system:

    MS 6340 - Mini ATX motherboard
    Athlon 1GHz TBird
    384MB RAM
    nVidia TNT2 RIVA 32MB
    235W HIPRO power supply

    Problems began a few months back whilst playing a fairly inensive game for the specs of this system - Day of defeat (Half life mod). The system suddenly rebooted, and since then has been unable to boot up without freezing for any more than 10 minutes.

    I've stripped the system down to ram, cpu, and gfx and booted into bios and left it there to see if it freezes, and it does.

    What I noticed was a strange hissing which seemed to cease as soon as the system froze. I also monitored the voltage off of a molex connector with a multimeter, and noticed the voltage drop by about 0.1Volts when the system froze.

    I investigated the hissing further by removing the ram, and gfx, so I only had a psu, mobo, and cpu (with hsf). I unplugged the fan on the cpu, and the when powered up, the hissing was coming from somewhere on the motherboard.

    The only problem is that none of the capacitors look in bad shape, and they are all at near perfect 90 degree angles to the mobo.

    Any clues?

    PS. I know someones already posted a 6340 thread, so mods, you can move this to that thread if you find it appropriate to do so.
  • alk
    New Member
    • Aug 2006
    • 5

    #2
    Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

    Just opened up the PSU and had a look inside to reveal at least 4 bad caps. Pretty much explains the irrational behaviour of the system, the hissing and the readings I was getting on the multi meter. Thanks anyway to you guys, the information on your homepage and forums has been of great help to me!

    If a new power supply doesn't do the trick, I'll maybe be posting on here again!

    Comment

    • davmax
      Badcaps Veteran
      • Dec 2005
      • 899

      #3
      Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

      Well done. Looks like you are on to the problem. Power supplies can be a real trap.
      Gigabyte EP45-DS3L Ultra Reliable (Power saver)
      Intel E8400 (3000Mhz) Bios temps. 4096Mb 800Mhz DDR2 Corsair XMS2 4-4-4-12
      160Gb WD SATAII Server grade
      Nvidia 8500GT 256Mb
      160Gb WD eSATAII Server grade for backup.
      Samsung 18x DVD writer
      Pioneer 16x DVD writer + 6x Dual layer
      33 way card reader
      Windows XP Pro SP3
      Thermaltake Matrix case with 430W Silent Power
      17" Benq FP737s LCD monitor
      HP Officejet Pro K5300 with refillable tanks

      Comment

      • alk
        New Member
        • Aug 2006
        • 5

        #4
        Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

        Thanks. I've just ordered a 300W power supply from ebuyer. Its only about £6-7, but the reviews seem good, and people are having no problems using it with systems of similar specs to mine. Hopefully it'll do the trick, considering the old supply was only 235W anyway.

        Comment

        • linuxguru
          Badcaps Legend
          • Apr 2005
          • 1564

          #5
          Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

          BTW, most HiPros are fairly well-built, and certainly worth a recap. If you recap with decent low-ESR non-aqueous series like Nichicon PX/PW/PJ/PM/PR/PS/PL, Chemicon LXZ, Panasonic FC/FK, etc. on the secondary, they should be OK for another decade or so.

          I have three recapped 250W HiPros on a Northwood 2.6, an Athlon-64 3000+ and an Athlon Thunderbird-C 1400 respectively, and all three are now rock-stable Linux build machines.

          Comment

          • tazwegion
            Badcaps Veteran
            • Jun 2006
            • 444
            • Australia

            #6
            Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

            Originally posted by alk
            Just opened up the PSU and had a look inside to reveal at least 4 bad caps. Pretty much explains the irrational behaviour of the system, the hissing and the readings I was getting on the multi meter. Thanks anyway to you guys, the information on your homepage and forums has been of great help to me!

            If a new power supply doesn't do the trick, I'll maybe be posting on here again!
            Yeah, i was gonna' suggest the PSU (you were too quick)

            I've had at least 2 'Yum Cha' generic 250w PSU's that 'hissed' on their way out, they were from Ipec propriety systems
            Viva LA Retro!

            Comment

            • kc8adu
              Super Moderator
              • Nov 2003
              • 8832
              • U.S.A!

              #7
              Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

              seems the latest hipro units pop caps faster than the old ones.esp the ones where the heatsinks form an arch over the transformer.caps not getting airflow and running hot or the crap caps just getting crappier?

              Comment

              • alk
                New Member
                • Aug 2006
                • 5

                #8
                Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                Today I got the new power supply, and its not really made a difference. The system now runs fine without any disk drive attached to it, it stayed on a good 20-30 minutes in the BIOS. As soon as I try booting up with ANY disk drives attached at all, the thing gives up the ghost. The same hissing is apparant, and Im pretty sure its coming from the motherboard now. Somewhere north of the ziff socket. Could it be that a mosfet has failed???

                Comment

                • alk
                  New Member
                  • Aug 2006
                  • 5

                  #9
                  Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                  sorry for double post, but could it be a torroid that is making this noise?

                  Comment

                  • gonzo0815
                    Badcaps Legend
                    • Feb 2006
                    • 1600

                    #10
                    Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                    May be the bulged caps had harmed the caps on the board too. This is not always visible.

                    Comment

                    • Melfman
                      New Member
                      • Jun 2007
                      • 3

                      #11
                      Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                      In case this helps anyone, I saw exactly the same problem recently (6340 unstable + hissing until crash).
                      Problem was a Nichicon 4700uF 6.3V HD series (sleeveless style) near the ATX power connector (C12 and C22 on ver:1 board). Wasn't bulged or askew at all, but was venting from the base. Had to clean electrolyte off the board as it had spread over a wide area
                      Temporarily replaced with a Nichicon 3300uF 10V PW from the spares bag + the board tests fine now (I'll do it properly one day ).

                      I'd swear the sound was the cap venting, but like alk said, there's a big inductor nearby that could have been whistling.

                      Melfman.

                      Comment

                      • Harvey
                        Badcaps Veteran
                        • Apr 2007
                        • 264

                        #12
                        Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                        I too have seen this with MS-6340s. There are four large capacitors surrounding the CPU and they get the full blast of the heatsink/fan output, and as a result fail, generally with no obvious bulging.

                        The hissing sound is the inductors ringing, and its an early warning - change the caps before the MOSFETs fail.

                        Comment

                        • Melfman
                          New Member
                          • Jun 2007
                          • 3

                          #13
                          Re: MS 6340 - Hissing

                          Cheers for the heads-up Harvey, I'll give them a look next time I dig it out of the closet. I did notice those 4 are Panasonic HFA's on mine (other people have Tayeh) so it's possible MSI got wise to the problem.

                          The cap that failed on mine was on the power input side of the VRM, so I'm suspecting the PSU over-rippled it. Hissing sound stopped when the cap was replaced, so hopefully that means the Pannys are OK. No obvious problems in the PSU, but it's cheap and nasty so will swap. System's sat spare at the moment anyway, so not too urgent.

                          Melfman

                          Comment

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