I have a 110v power supply which was plugged into a 220 source. 
When I opened the brick up, the first thing I noticed was a piece of charcoal which used to be a thermistor. From what I can tell following the PCB traces, line comes in and goes into F1 which is labeled T6.3A250V then proceeds into the second component labeled VAR1 which when I removed the component had a symbol for a thermistor under it. The only marking on the thermistor is 125deg C.
I have not removed F1 to check impedance yet.
My questions are:
1. What are the chances that the thermistor blowing up prevented further damage to the power supply?
2. More importantly if the damage is limited to F1 and VAR1, what other circuitry could I find these components?
I am currently deployed overseas and need to get the pwr supply up and running. Ordering components on-line is an option but a 2 to 3 week turnaround will not cut it.
3. Would pwr supplies from computers have the components I need, or where would be the best place to look?
Thanks for any help.
Todd

When I opened the brick up, the first thing I noticed was a piece of charcoal which used to be a thermistor. From what I can tell following the PCB traces, line comes in and goes into F1 which is labeled T6.3A250V then proceeds into the second component labeled VAR1 which when I removed the component had a symbol for a thermistor under it. The only marking on the thermistor is 125deg C.
I have not removed F1 to check impedance yet.
My questions are:
1. What are the chances that the thermistor blowing up prevented further damage to the power supply?
2. More importantly if the damage is limited to F1 and VAR1, what other circuitry could I find these components?
I am currently deployed overseas and need to get the pwr supply up and running. Ordering components on-line is an option but a 2 to 3 week turnaround will not cut it.
3. Would pwr supplies from computers have the components I need, or where would be the best place to look?
Thanks for any help.
Todd
Comment