Good day folks. I thought I'd share my findings on what I consider the most common failure on these BN44 supplies. In my case, it's a 00213A, though it may apply to other boards in the BN44 family.
The issue is as follows: the owner would hear a pop and see some smoke coming out of the cabinet followed by the obligatory jump-scare
They'd bring it in, I'd take it apart...the fuse is blown on the thing and no caps appear to be failing, so now I'm pretty stumped and start measuring semiconductors thinking one of them has gone kaboom, but no luck. Now as I'm doing this and flipping the board around, I suddenly notice a massive burn mark hiding behind the main reservoir cap and NOW I see what the cause of failure was: blown snubber cap (CM801 in this case)...seems I run into this issue a lot with PSUs lately, more so than regular electrolytic cap failure, go figure :| The jumpers are also fried, so it looks like we have to rebuild those as well...great...soldering iron, plenty of solder, melt, suck, repeat for the other leg and the snubber's out. Repeat for the jumpers (or what's left of them). Clean the area as good as possible. Fabricate some new jumpers out of the thickest solid-core wire that could still fit in the holes...ok, they look a bit wonky, but they do the job
Install a new snubber of the same value of course (22 nF-222 printed on it) but with one voltage step higher than the original (2kV instead of 1kV). Put new 6.3A fuse in. Light bulb test tells us we're safe. Put the PSU back on the chassis and try it out. Job done
The issue is as follows: the owner would hear a pop and see some smoke coming out of the cabinet followed by the obligatory jump-scare



Comment