Another PSU I have on the rebuild list.
This one I got along with a few other stuff (a Allied AL-8400BTX that I also need to fix, a ASRock K7VT4A with all the cables and a Matsonic MS8137C+) for cheap.
For start, there was dirt. I mean a ton of dirt. Then,there was a cheap seized fan that vibrated like hell. Input filtering? What's that? Output filtering? Nope.
Caps inside were NCD for the primaries and the secondary was full of BH.
Fast forward to today, I bought a pretty new system (G31,Pentium E5300,1GB RAM,160GB HDD, Intel iGPU) and it came with the exact same PSU,except that one wasn't working - for some reason it wouldn't provide 12v yet all the caps are fine.
Knowing that a E5300 isn't that tame (not surprised that the PCB inside the PSU from the case was darkened),I dug out the following:
-my trusty 60W soldering iron
-a cup of rosin core
-1mm thick solder wire
-some old Deer PCB that I scrapped due to peeling traces
-a pack of used caps that still tested good from my parts box
-an ERL-35 transformer I desoldered out of a burnt to kingdom come Kaisen
...and began work. For first, I replaced the main transformer (an sorry excuse of a EI-33 transformer) with the ERL-35 from the Kaisen. Thankfully, only one trace peeled a bit but I fixed that with quite a lot of solder (neatly laid so I don't short stuff). Then, I replaced the fan with a clear 80mm Raidmax fan (which is also pretty silent
). Then, I recapped the secondary. I used a few G-Luxons and one lone DON cap (that tested good) I had on hand from a Deer I recapped.
All in all, I turned what looked like a gutless wonder in something that could power a 12v system safely. There's still some stuff to do: replace the input transistors with 13009s ( I have some in TO247 package but need to test them for shorts), maybe balance the output rectifiers (20A for 3.3 and 5v, and 16A for 12v) and beef up the input caps.
This one I got along with a few other stuff (a Allied AL-8400BTX that I also need to fix, a ASRock K7VT4A with all the cables and a Matsonic MS8137C+) for cheap.
For start, there was dirt. I mean a ton of dirt. Then,there was a cheap seized fan that vibrated like hell. Input filtering? What's that? Output filtering? Nope.
Caps inside were NCD for the primaries and the secondary was full of BH.
Fast forward to today, I bought a pretty new system (G31,Pentium E5300,1GB RAM,160GB HDD, Intel iGPU) and it came with the exact same PSU,except that one wasn't working - for some reason it wouldn't provide 12v yet all the caps are fine.
Knowing that a E5300 isn't that tame (not surprised that the PCB inside the PSU from the case was darkened),I dug out the following:
-my trusty 60W soldering iron
-a cup of rosin core
-1mm thick solder wire
-some old Deer PCB that I scrapped due to peeling traces
-a pack of used caps that still tested good from my parts box
-an ERL-35 transformer I desoldered out of a burnt to kingdom come Kaisen
...and began work. For first, I replaced the main transformer (an sorry excuse of a EI-33 transformer) with the ERL-35 from the Kaisen. Thankfully, only one trace peeled a bit but I fixed that with quite a lot of solder (neatly laid so I don't short stuff). Then, I replaced the fan with a clear 80mm Raidmax fan (which is also pretty silent

All in all, I turned what looked like a gutless wonder in something that could power a 12v system safely. There's still some stuff to do: replace the input transistors with 13009s ( I have some in TO247 package but need to test them for shorts), maybe balance the output rectifiers (20A for 3.3 and 5v, and 16A for 12v) and beef up the input caps.
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