Re: the gutless, bloated, and fried power supply hall of shame
This morning when I was at my computer, I heard a hissing sound and thought it was my monitor (which appears to be on its last legs), but I found out that it was a plugpack, DVD model DSA-0131F-05 and upon opening, a bulging 22uF 400V Jamicon TK (105C) unit was found.
The particular unit is of the self-oscillating type, secondary capacitors are 680uF 10V Jamicon WG (before and after output inductor), and as in the picture, the fuse is crossing the secondary side, even though it has heatshrink on it.
Has anyone else seen a bulging 400/450V Jamicon unit, especially if it is on the primary side?
This morning when I was at my computer, I heard a hissing sound and thought it was my monitor (which appears to be on its last legs), but I found out that it was a plugpack, DVD model DSA-0131F-05 and upon opening, a bulging 22uF 400V Jamicon TK (105C) unit was found.
The particular unit is of the self-oscillating type, secondary capacitors are 680uF 10V Jamicon WG (before and after output inductor), and as in the picture, the fuse is crossing the secondary side, even though it has heatshrink on it.
Has anyone else seen a bulging 400/450V Jamicon unit, especially if it is on the primary side?
Half of the computer problems is caused by bad contacts 
In these, when the sleeve bearing fan dies, they ALWAYS keep running until the switching transistors blow. I've seen 6 of them die and it's the switchers every time, as well as all the YC caps bulging

The label claims 250W. 192W on the 12V. Looks like B0S
I actually have one being used for a linux box (requires around 100W continuous, around 160W under load) I recapped it and put a ball bearing fan in there. Just to see if the little bugger can last with a little upgrade
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