Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
The meter I've mentioned is just about £25.
I've just taken all the capacitors of a board, replaced a couple with low capacitance but still the monitor displays the same fault (switching on the backlight then switching it off after a second or ). Is it possible that the capacitors have high esr but good capacitance?
Bad capacitors: where from?
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
You want 10 W in idle? Yeah, maybe with some tablet…Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Tell me about it, with it pulling 180W idle it's a ridiculous energy sink. I've got to build a HTPC which will be always on... and I want to aim for 10W idle... got a long way to go!!Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
That's a very inefficient stand by, tom. Maybe disable wake on lan, wake on keypress, stuff like that.
I have an Athlon something on the workbench that I have just to connect scope to it and other things like that, and with a crappy no-name power supply, it still uses only 3.7w when turned off.
All this talk almost makes me plug my main pc in the power meter again but I usually never restart this computer so unless there's a power failure, it's not gonna happen.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
My computer pulls 8W in standby with no USB devices attached. Even at low load, due to the flyback configuration of most standby supplies, ripple current can be significantly higher than the load current (3~4x).Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I thought the point of a standby chip was to provide only as much current as the device attached to the circuit requires... Only thing connected to the USB port that was active was a wireless NIC... How much amperage would that draw with the computer turned off?Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
A 5VSB circuit is much more abusive towards crap capacitors. Ripple current under normal load can be lower for the output caps than on the 5VSB side!Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I have seen bloated Teapos, OST, CrapXon etc., no difference for me, replace all on sight. Ppl also used to say CEC caps are not that bad, they can last and some other talk. Now I have recapped two Enermax Liberty PSUs within couple weeks with half of them bloated. I just don't want to sit like a duck and wait for the supposedly good Teapo series to prove bad as all of the others. But as ppl come to me more and more to replace the already bad caps, they discovered it's better to replace them right away. It was just a matter of time we'd discover bad but nto bloated Teapos…
You know, many people want silent computer. So they basically *want* the PSU to be hot. But here they are with loads of Fortrons running noisy because if they would be slightly more silent (and hoter), they won't last 3 years (or warranty peroid at least, for some models), they'd last 2 years (and some models not even that).Last edited by Behemot; 03-01-2013, 02:20 PM.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I havet SZ and SC lying before me, both optically jsut fine. Took them from one Fortron power supply which has supposedly been used for only A FEW WEEKS. Replacing them both solved the problem with the PSU not turning on.
Is there any other way how to prove that NOTHING FROM TEAPO is reliable? Or will you and other ppl still continue calling Teapo „somewhat good“ despite the facts they are so bad?
Keep in mind, of all these large 2200uf+ Teapo SC caps I've taken out of FSP PSUs over the years, I've not seen a single one bloated. It's always the small 8mm Teapo SC caps which are bloated near the 5VSB rail (And it's not because of the two transistor design, these models actually have an IC for the circuit). So maybe the production of the 10mm large ones is different in a way from the 8mm ones that makes them better quality? Maybe Sparkle Power or Fortron had a special deal with them to produce reliable batches for them...
Again, I'm not saying that I would trust Teapo SEK or Teapo SC, only that I have found Teapo SC and Teapo SEK still performing well after many years of operation. Two days ago I saw an Asus P5GC-MX board with all UCC KZG caps and a Codegen PSU still working perfectly, does that mean KZG is a reliable cap, absolutely not.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I know
Use them as you wish but I would just be glad if you called the the real name: Bad Caps.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I don't care if you call them so-so, mediocre or whatever. Whoever wants some device to be stable and to be able to rely on it will count one and one and realize it's just a stupid risk.
Using capacitors which may fail anywhere between tomorrow and in 3 years is suicide. So yes, I see only good caps I can rely on, and than the rest I cannot count on and nothing on them can be worth the risk. Because I just don't accept risk.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
If you combine the experience from several users here about Teapo, the good and the bad ones, you come to conclusion that they are mediocre. What exactly don't you get about that?
Just compare Teapo with GSC/Capxon. Could you say they are of similar quality?Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
You got a proof here that your dreamed "good" Teapo series is capable of failing after few weeks of use. That makes it crap of all craps. If you still fail to see that, you are just a troll.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
I havet SZ and SC lying before me, both optically jsut fine. Took them from one Fortron power supply which has supposedly been used for only A FEW WEEKS. Replacing them both solved the problem with the PSU not turning on.
Is there any other way how to prove that NOTHING FROM TEAPO is reliable? Or will you and other ppl still continue calling Teapo „somewhat good“ despite the facts they are so bad?Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Is there any other way how to prove that NOTHING FROM TEAPO is reliable? Or will you and other ppl still continue calling Teapo „somewhat good“ despite the facts they are so bad?Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Yageo - Same as Teapo I think, poor quality
Leaguer - Never heard of them, so I automatically consider them bad. I may be incorrect, they may be fantastic, but that would be very unlikely.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Good method is to consider everything but known good brands (6 or so) to be bad.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Depends on what you mean by essential if doing this for a living then yes if just hobbying/occasional fix then perhaps not. Firstly you have to understand the results and be able to find a data sheet. The cost has to be offset against number of caps you (save) re-use. I am lucky in that I live near a Farnell outlet so no postage so I would have to save a lot of caps to get a £70 meter. They can save time but if you have to take the caps off board to measure, then how much time? Again there are loads of posts discussing the pros and cons of this and fairly recent one regarding ebay meter you query. I thought of getting one just for interest sake I thought they were a bit cheaper but as the £££ has just gone tits up perhaps that is reflected.Leave a comment:
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Re: Bad capacitors: where from?
Thanks for the replies so far.
It also seems essential to have some sort of ESR meter. There are some cheap ones about from China which seem almost in kit form. I don't know whether anyone here has any experience of such devices?
For example:
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/NEW-TRANSI...-/160945476582Leave a comment:
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