Hello, everyone.
Yesterday I took out USB flash drive from back of PC and computer turned off. Didn't think much about that and wen to bed.
At the morning PC didn't turn on. I opened PSU, checked fuse, it was okay.
Then disconnected PSU from PC components and turned it on. Voltage on 12V rail was in ~12,7-13,1V range. Obviously too high.
Then I spotted tiny potentiometer on one of PCBs and thought - what the heck, let's try to turn it and see what happens. That turned out to be voltage adjustment for 12V rail and probably other riles too. I adjusted 12V rail voltage with all components connected to about 11,75V and now this PC aparently works fine.
Question: Do You have an idea what have caused voltage drift in the first place? Could it be dying secondary caps, tiny caps on PCB where potentiometer is, or something else?
All caps in this PSU are original, except one (one Jamicon 3300uF/10V has been changed some time ago).
In the attatched picture is noted potentiometer I adjusted.
Yesterday I took out USB flash drive from back of PC and computer turned off. Didn't think much about that and wen to bed.
At the morning PC didn't turn on. I opened PSU, checked fuse, it was okay.
Then disconnected PSU from PC components and turned it on. Voltage on 12V rail was in ~12,7-13,1V range. Obviously too high.
Then I spotted tiny potentiometer on one of PCBs and thought - what the heck, let's try to turn it and see what happens. That turned out to be voltage adjustment for 12V rail and probably other riles too. I adjusted 12V rail voltage with all components connected to about 11,75V and now this PC aparently works fine.
Question: Do You have an idea what have caused voltage drift in the first place? Could it be dying secondary caps, tiny caps on PCB where potentiometer is, or something else?
All caps in this PSU are original, except one (one Jamicon 3300uF/10V has been changed some time ago).
In the attatched picture is noted potentiometer I adjusted.
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