Got on my hands a couple wounded deers (or LC power maybe, but they use "2005" controllers so they're probably deer), they had exactly THREE main caps, all blown on one of them (the other one has those resistors farther away from the caps...). The insulation on some of the cables was also damaged. Guess where all the molten plastic was? On the minimum load resistors of course.
Also the labels indicated different distribution on the two "450W" supplies, but internally they are almost the same. But we already know that so i won't get into it again. I'll be making my own labels to stick on 'em when i sell 'em. Right now i'm waiting to get some MOVs into them so i don't blow anyone's computer up.
So, back on the wounded and burnt deer. All rails were low due to the bad caps. I was generous with it and added all missing caps, and one pi filter inductor for the 5v rail. The pi filters for the other rails were silkscreened on the top, but the PCB tells another story... to save on wire links, they redesigned the PCB to short the placeholders for the inductors from the get go. I've seen cheap but this is ridiculous.
After completing the output filtering (well, as much as the PCB allowed for), all rails are in spec. The darn load resistors however, the ones on 3.3v and 12v, threatened my pretty Nichicons. The body of the resistors was at 100C!!! I noticed that the one on the 5v rail had actually unsoldered itself from the board, yet that rail was in spec too.
So i pulled 'em all out and whatcha think. The 3.3v rail is exactly the same at 3.35v, and voltage on 12v increased by only 30mv, from 12.27v to 12.30v. 5v is at 5.18v.
That obviously brings the question: Are those resistors actually necessary, or are they simply there because they keep using the same obsolete designs? I know that modern controllers generally do not need a minimum load, so why are they there?
Also the labels indicated different distribution on the two "450W" supplies, but internally they are almost the same. But we already know that so i won't get into it again. I'll be making my own labels to stick on 'em when i sell 'em. Right now i'm waiting to get some MOVs into them so i don't blow anyone's computer up.
So, back on the wounded and burnt deer. All rails were low due to the bad caps. I was generous with it and added all missing caps, and one pi filter inductor for the 5v rail. The pi filters for the other rails were silkscreened on the top, but the PCB tells another story... to save on wire links, they redesigned the PCB to short the placeholders for the inductors from the get go. I've seen cheap but this is ridiculous.
After completing the output filtering (well, as much as the PCB allowed for), all rails are in spec. The darn load resistors however, the ones on 3.3v and 12v, threatened my pretty Nichicons. The body of the resistors was at 100C!!! I noticed that the one on the 5v rail had actually unsoldered itself from the board, yet that rail was in spec too.
So i pulled 'em all out and whatcha think. The 3.3v rail is exactly the same at 3.35v, and voltage on 12v increased by only 30mv, from 12.27v to 12.30v. 5v is at 5.18v.
That obviously brings the question: Are those resistors actually necessary, or are they simply there because they keep using the same obsolete designs? I know that modern controllers generally do not need a minimum load, so why are they there?
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