Ok it seems as of late I have a pretty decent supply of junker computers. K7's and various P4's. Needless to say, just about all of them have bad caps.
Anyhoos, today I finally got my Blue ESR meter built, calibrated, and all that good stuff.
And lemme tell ya, that thing is better than sliced bread for snffing out bad capacitors! I honestly don't see how anyone can even begin to repair modern electronics without one.
Back to my question... I see on some junker PSUs that the average
low ESR caps they are using for output filtering typically reads anywhere from 02-.04 which in most cases is above the manufacturers specs. Obviously I'm assuming that anything reading more than .05 is probably on the way to the graveyard if it isn't already there.
But, alas the meter does not have sufficient resolution to really measure that
low, and I'm also guessing that once you get down into that range there is some error on the part of the meter that can't be helped.
Since these systems and PSUs are free, and the PSUs are old revision ATX styles typically biased towards the 5v rail with low 12v amperage ratings, I don't want to sink any money into them if possible. Now if I run up on a more modern PSU with a couple 12V rails, thats diferent, I would probably do a full recap of it. Basically all I want with the typical trash picked junkers I find is to get them to work and run stable, at least for a while.
Thoughts?
Anyhoos, today I finally got my Blue ESR meter built, calibrated, and all that good stuff.

Back to my question... I see on some junker PSUs that the average
low ESR caps they are using for output filtering typically reads anywhere from 02-.04 which in most cases is above the manufacturers specs. Obviously I'm assuming that anything reading more than .05 is probably on the way to the graveyard if it isn't already there.
But, alas the meter does not have sufficient resolution to really measure that
low, and I'm also guessing that once you get down into that range there is some error on the part of the meter that can't be helped.
Since these systems and PSUs are free, and the PSUs are old revision ATX styles typically biased towards the 5v rail with low 12v amperage ratings, I don't want to sink any money into them if possible. Now if I run up on a more modern PSU with a couple 12V rails, thats diferent, I would probably do a full recap of it. Basically all I want with the typical trash picked junkers I find is to get them to work and run stable, at least for a while.
Thoughts?
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