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Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

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  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    I looked for visual signs of arcing earlier, but I didn't see any. Then again, I'm not sure I was really looking in the right place. I ordered the above inductors from Digi-Key, but neither one tests out as equivalent to the original. So I ordered some magnet wire and will try rewinding the coil.

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  • Agent24
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Sorry, should have been more accurate. I mean, it's interesting how this PSU has active PFC and the same ticking symptoms as the Enermax... maybe not same cause, but then again... mine was ticking.. then I took it apart.. when I put it back together it stopped ticking.. then started up again few months later

    I wonder if the coil was bad on this Seasonic or the act of disassembly and reassembly was more to do with the reason for the apparent 'fix'?

    Uniballer: You said there was blackening on the coil but is it confirmed as burnt insulation or just paint etc? If it is arcing you should be able to see sparks at that point in a dark room when running the PSU

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  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    I have changed the coil in that case and it did not help so most likely the problem is somewhere else.

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  • Agent24
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Behemot View Post
    You can also just buy copper wire and rewind it manualy, the core will be OK, most likely just wire insulation is bad somewhere.
    Same problem as our Enermax Liberties?

    Leave a comment:


  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    I kinda like that idea. I took a caliper to the wire and the diameter is approximately .041" (about 1.04 mm). So it is most likely 18 awg or 1mm magnet wire. Unfortunately, I don't have any ATM, and it appears to be cheaper to buy an inductor than a spool of magnet wire. Unless somebody has a cheap source of good quality magnet wire...

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  • Behemot
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    You can also just buy copper wire and rewind it manualy, the core will be OK, most likely just wire insulation is bad somewhere.

    Leave a comment:


  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    3A seems too low (input voltage peak is 160V, 625W/160V = 3.9A). Maybe M8892-ND is a better fit.

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  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    On close examination of the inductor in question I have noticed some blackening between two windings. It is really hard to tell if this is due to arcing, but it is about 120 degrees around from where the leads come off the coil, so I don't see why it would be a purposeful marking. What do you think are the chances of stopping the arcing by re-enameling the wire in this section?

    Measuring the inductor using the technique in the link of my prior post I came up with 306 uH (frequency was 14.9 kHz). I counted 69 turns on the toroidal core. Going through Digi-Key fixed inductors I selected a through-hole toroid with 300 uH and radial leads. At that point powdered iron was the only core type I could specify. Selecting by dimensions (I measure about 30mm diameter by 15mm width) and availability I came up with 732-2281-ND. It has a current rating of 3A, but the operating temperature is only -25C to 85C. Does this sound right for an 80% efficient 500 watt power supply? Anybody got a better choice that I could actually buy? Or do I have this all wrong?
    Last edited by Uniballer; 10-12-2013, 06:21 AM.

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by cheapie View Post
    You lost me here:
    That's nothing compared to what I've been doing in my electronics class.

    Leave a comment:


  • cheapie
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    Any chance of finding a replacement inductor? What do I need to know about this one? I assume wire gauge and inductance. Do I need to know more?
    I believe you also need to get one with the same kind of core. You might want to ask someone more knowledgeable about that.
    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    I don't have an LCR meter, is this method reasonably accurate?
    You lost me here:


    ...but it sounds okay.

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  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by cheapie View Post
    Given that you said it was arcing and that moving the inductor stopped it, it's probably the inductor itself.
    I'm inferring arcing from the sound, but I didn't actually see any sparks when I watched for them with the lights off.

    Any chance of finding a replacement inductor? What do I need to know about this one? I assume wire gauge and inductance. Do I need to know more?
    I don't have an LCR meter, is this method reasonably accurate?

    Leave a comment:


  • cheapie
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    It's ticking again. Again, moving the inductor stopped it. I pulled the inductor and don't see any burn marks. The glue that was supposed to be holding it in place was clearly not working. Do you think the problem is the inductor itself?
    Given that you said it was arcing and that moving the inductor stopped it, it's probably the inductor itself.

    Leave a comment:


  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    It's ticking again. Again, moving the inductor stopped it. I pulled the inductor and don't see any burn marks. The glue that was supposed to be holding it in place was clearly not working. Do you think the problem is the inductor itself? The PFC/PWM chip is a CM6800G on a separate little board with a bunch of support components (mainly resistors and caps plus a few diodes). I don't have an LCR meter.

    Leave a comment:


  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    I tested a bunch of parts in-circuit, and wound up pulling some to test out-of-circuit and didn't find anything bad. Ripple meets the ATX V2.2 specs if tested right at the PSU board with a short ground lead.

    When I put everything back together and ran an AM2 vintage board running MEMTEST86+ for a couple days I found the power supply was ticking again. My redneck stethoscope said that the source of the noise was the inductor used for the PFC boost converter. I pushed the inductor around with the plastic tube while the supply was running and found a position where it has apparently stopped arcing.

    Leave a comment:


  • Kiriakos GR
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Can you compare the symptoms of your PSU, with what is presented in this video ?

    http://youtu.be/veTVUhNiRC0




    .
    Last edited by Kiriakos GR; 09-20-2013, 08:23 AM.

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  • cheapie
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    Actually, that is when it's off. I'm only reading about 376 VDC across the cap when it's on.
    That's correct, then.

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  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Actually, that is when it's off. I'm only reading about 376 VDC across the cap when it's on.

    BTW - noise is worse - almost twice as bad - when there is more load (old P4 motherboard).

    Leave a comment:


  • cheapie
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    When I power the supply from 120 volts I only have about 160 VDC across the primary cap. That seems to make sense, but am I missing something?
    When it's on? You should be getting more than that when it's on, since it has APFC.

    Leave a comment:


  • Uniballer
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    I didn't get to work on this supply yesterday, but could I get that ugly noise spike if something is wrong with the snubber diode on the primary side? That makes more sense to me than simply a capacitor problem, especially because the noise seems to be there on all of the main output voltages (didn't check 5VSB).

    Also, this is labeled as a 100-240 VAC supply with no voltage range switch (i.e. there is no doubler). When I power the supply from 120 volts I only have about 160 VDC across the primary cap. That seems to make sense, but am I missing something?

    And another thing. Does anybody have an opinion on whether increasing the load on the power supply (e.g. putting on an old P4 motherboard I don't care about) might affect the ugly ripple noise?

    Thanks for any opinions and/or advice.
    Last edited by Uniballer; 09-19-2013, 04:12 AM.

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  • senz_90
    replied
    Re: Seasonic SS-500GB "ticking"

    Originally posted by Uniballer View Post
    Except that I never noticed it on that machine before, and last night after everybody went home I could hear it from 6 to 8 feet away from the front of the system.

    D301 (axial) and D304 (TO220 on the heatsink) both appear good with a DMM diode check.
    lol. that's bad. yeah u can follow the domas advice that have ever facing same case likes you. i couldn't give you any advicve because i've never face a case likes that. but i think it'll makes easier for everybody to give you advice by post your more detail photograph of PSU here, not just a single photograph that hasn't show the component more closer.. just my opinion.
    Last edited by senz_90; 09-18-2013, 01:17 AM.

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