iMicro ATX3035-450
Is there a limit to how many PSU's you can post?
I can't believe this thing still works. It powered an Athlon 64 X2, GeForce GT440 system for who knows how long. And all that dust was acquired from a slow spinning thermally controlled fan. How did those BH caps not die?! And look at the secondary, it looks clean. I didn't dust this thing, I took pictures as is. BR is 4A, switchers are D304X rated at 12A, 30A on 5V, 20A on 12V, 20A on 3.3V. It does have a slot for a second 12V rectifier. I'm thinking about fixing it up. Although, it does have all 20AWG wiring...Haven't checked the solder side yet.
Is there a limit to how many PSU's you can post?
I can't believe this thing still works. It powered an Athlon 64 X2, GeForce GT440 system for who knows how long. And all that dust was acquired from a slow spinning thermally controlled fan. How did those BH caps not die?! And look at the secondary, it looks clean. I didn't dust this thing, I took pictures as is. BR is 4A, switchers are D304X rated at 12A, 30A on 5V, 20A on 12V, 20A on 3.3V. It does have a slot for a second 12V rectifier. I'm thinking about fixing it up. Although, it does have all 20AWG wiring...Haven't checked the solder side yet.
Never seen them before either.
Half of the computer problems is caused by bad contacts 






) using Seacon for the primaries and good Saturn (YC) caps for the secondary, and moved the board into the Premier casing. Got everything back together,installed it into my Pentium 4 and pushed the power button. Started up without a problem. Then I thought of recapping it with 16v 1500uf KY caps. It seems though,that something doesn't work as it should,as it sometimes turns on but sometimes it doesn't in the way that I press the power button but there's no sound. Just the power led comes on and it stays like that until I turn it off. It does the same now with the 1000uf 10v caps. (it didn't when I installed them the first time)
Comment