Hi folks. Working on a Corsair PSU. I am semi new at SMPS but I have around 1500 pro hours working on 230/400 in the combat zone and some lesser amount on the side with 120/220 state side. I also have about 8000 hours pro time as a bench tech. So I feel like I know how to do this kind of work safely. I have been reading up on SMPS prints and watching video's for about 1.5 years now. Worked on one already which I had to change about 10 components. Cheap POS amplifier.
Anyways....Back to the weirdo Corsair issue. Fuse was blown when I got it. Did the light bulb trick and it stays on for any length of time. I noticed with the other PSU I worked on the bulb never really went out but dimmed some within the first few seconds usually. This one seems to bright to look at. So I assume a short.
Just a quick Q...Is this light bulb trick 100%? Does it always go dim or off or blink then off when things are good? Is there any scenario on any model where it might stay bright and not go out?
I ask because here is what happened. I have one of those laser temp probes so I let it run for at least 5 minutes and check all the major suspects for heat. Found nothing except 2 resistors that were about 80F (Ambient was 70F). They had that damn glue on em so I scraped it off after I discharged everything.
I disco'd and discharged everything but the caps 0v anyways. I checked out of curiosity. So I started probing around. Too my mind if something is shorted it will be shorted in the board. So If I'm looking for bad MOSFET etc, it should show as shorted. Take it out and retest. I checked the fets for the PFC, The fets for the main transformer, the MOV, even the caps. Nothing came up shorted. I even Ohmed out the AC and DC side of the rectifier sandwich. AC was infinite and DC was about 2K.
Normally I start pulling stuff out at this point but my 25 year old solder vac finally gave up the ghost. I have another 1 on order but that will take a while.
So I just could not accept that the light was on and I could not find a short. Seriously. I have a clamp on am meter and I was drawing about 750mA while the bulb was on. I decided to put on the rubber gloves and get serious. The bulb was dropping 116v and only 3v at the AC side of the rectifier and 1.5 volts at the DC side. Powered it off. SO by my calculations the bulb was only providing around 155 ohms. Not really all that much for 116v. But yet that bulb is hogging all the volts so there must be very few ohms in the rest of the circuit. A short. Probed and probed and couldn't find it. I even check the ohms on the outputs and the lowest reading I got was 300 ish ohms. Seems enough.
I had almost given up but then something happened. I was making one more time around with the diode tester and I found a almost dead short on one of the main filter caps. Here is the weird part. They are both in parallel across the + and - Pads. But the other one reads infinite. It's seriously on 1 inch away. As I creep the probe closer to the other end of the pad I go from infinite to 100 ohms to almost a dead short. At first I thought maybe there was some coating on the traces messing me up but I have sharp points and I left marks in the solder now ffs. I'm definitely pulling that cap when my new solder vac comes in but WTF. All I can think of is there is something strange going on inside the board. It has a front and back so maybe an inner layer too that's messed up. So odd.
Anyone have any insight?
Anyways....Back to the weirdo Corsair issue. Fuse was blown when I got it. Did the light bulb trick and it stays on for any length of time. I noticed with the other PSU I worked on the bulb never really went out but dimmed some within the first few seconds usually. This one seems to bright to look at. So I assume a short.
Just a quick Q...Is this light bulb trick 100%? Does it always go dim or off or blink then off when things are good? Is there any scenario on any model where it might stay bright and not go out?
I ask because here is what happened. I have one of those laser temp probes so I let it run for at least 5 minutes and check all the major suspects for heat. Found nothing except 2 resistors that were about 80F (Ambient was 70F). They had that damn glue on em so I scraped it off after I discharged everything.
I disco'd and discharged everything but the caps 0v anyways. I checked out of curiosity. So I started probing around. Too my mind if something is shorted it will be shorted in the board. So If I'm looking for bad MOSFET etc, it should show as shorted. Take it out and retest. I checked the fets for the PFC, The fets for the main transformer, the MOV, even the caps. Nothing came up shorted. I even Ohmed out the AC and DC side of the rectifier sandwich. AC was infinite and DC was about 2K.
Normally I start pulling stuff out at this point but my 25 year old solder vac finally gave up the ghost. I have another 1 on order but that will take a while.
So I just could not accept that the light was on and I could not find a short. Seriously. I have a clamp on am meter and I was drawing about 750mA while the bulb was on. I decided to put on the rubber gloves and get serious. The bulb was dropping 116v and only 3v at the AC side of the rectifier and 1.5 volts at the DC side. Powered it off. SO by my calculations the bulb was only providing around 155 ohms. Not really all that much for 116v. But yet that bulb is hogging all the volts so there must be very few ohms in the rest of the circuit. A short. Probed and probed and couldn't find it. I even check the ohms on the outputs and the lowest reading I got was 300 ish ohms. Seems enough.
I had almost given up but then something happened. I was making one more time around with the diode tester and I found a almost dead short on one of the main filter caps. Here is the weird part. They are both in parallel across the + and - Pads. But the other one reads infinite. It's seriously on 1 inch away. As I creep the probe closer to the other end of the pad I go from infinite to 100 ohms to almost a dead short. At first I thought maybe there was some coating on the traces messing me up but I have sharp points and I left marks in the solder now ffs. I'm definitely pulling that cap when my new solder vac comes in but WTF. All I can think of is there is something strange going on inside the board. It has a front and back so maybe an inner layer too that's messed up. So odd.
Anyone have any insight?
Comment