Don't buy those $10 PSU "specials". They fail, and they have taken whole computers with them.
My computer doubles as a space heater.
Permanently Retired Systems:
RIP Advantech UNO-3072LA (2008-2021) - Decommissioned and taken out of service permanently due to lack of software support for it. Not very likely to ever be recommissioned again.
Asus Q550LF (Old main laptop, 2014-2022) - Decommissioned and stripped due to a myriad of problems, the main battery bloating being the final nail in the coffin.
Kooky and Kool Systems
- 1996 Power Macintosh 7200/120 + PC Compatibility Card - Under Restoration
- 1993 Gateway 2000 80486DX/50 - Fully Operational/WIP
- 2004 Athlon 64 Retro Gaming System - Indefinitely Parked
- Main Workstation - Fully operational!
Clean the computer, but what? XD
Not what you mean, but if you mean motherboard. This pretty clean the motherboard hehe
This motherboard also I do not have much importance, me use casually, and if it spoils nothing happens.
yes you mean S.O
And S.O install no more than one month ago, and has nothing rare.
Bye
that quality can not have these capacitors, but I do not really trust the truth XD.
Sanyo comes from a radio, I do not understand why not its own brand capacitors, is incomprehensible ...
Peace 16v 470Microfarads, I had never seen (what a brand) XD:
Tong Jia (I have no voltage information, I have not had time):
S.I 22v 2200microfarads:
WISDOM 0.33Microfarads 50v (This looks like a clone of Rubycon 90s):
this radio brought me because it is not heard, and I think a capacitor is in poor condition, and seeing what has mounted no wonder not turn XD.
When dismounting go over the radio, I will make a more detailed summary of all capacitors if you want.
When you have the radio on my hands I will continue removal, I get curious.
^
Bad they can't spell the name right...I'm assuming they're intended to be fake Nichicons. Where did you acquire those? The source should also be shared and shamed!
Momaka - here you go: the pix were linked from a photobucket account on post #725. I pulled them to my laptop and uploaded them for you. I could see them fine.
Hanatsu - This is the exact reason why we request all images to be directly uploaded to this site, not linked to a third-party site.
I see them now (tried using Firefox) and also the ones you uploaded.
Not sure why, but Photo-foock-it URLs can't seem to open with my trusty old Opera 10/11/12 browsers. Certainly makes one wonder why (more precisely, what exactly they are embedding in those URLs or JPGs that older browsers can't read).
Yes, the source of those caps should definitely be posted here so we know how to avoid them.
These poor Panny caps...They are FJ series. They are on the VRM out of a Phenom CPU that has never been cleaned. Since the dust is covering the heatsink, the CPU fan was revving up really high and sending all of that heat directly onto those caps, which were already probably getting warm for filtering the output to a 95W CPU. Couldn't find out POH because the original Seagate HDD had a mechanical failure. I would recap the board if it didn't have a defective nVidia chipset.
Is that board a M2N68-LA? Those 1800uF 6.3V 8mm wide 20mm tall Panasonic capacitors by the CPU are usually Panasonic FL, although sometimes 1500uF 6.3V Panasonic FJ of the same height and width are used on other locations. Not the first account of a failed Panasonic there. Unless it's just the photo, I can see some slight discoloration there. I would guess the other caps on the board are 820uF 6.3V Panasonic FJS and 1000uF 16V Rubycon MBZ. According to these threads, it's usually the one farthest down that fails in the VRM low:
Isn't that the single phase for HT, memory etc. controller? That has sepparate input from the CPU core itself. The usual configuration is like this, 3+1 phase.
Less jewellery, more gold into electrotech industry! Half of the computer problems is caused by bad contacts
Unless it's just the photo, I can see some slight discoloration there.
I see it too, and I wouldn't call it slight. It appears to be mostly around the VRM toroid inductors rather than the MOSFETs (although, those free-standing MOSFETs are never a pleasant sight to see either). My guess would be that ASUS must have either f-ed up on the CPU VRM design or they were too cheap and cut a corner when choosing the specs for the inductors.
Yes, the clogged fan heatsink is not good, but that alone should not have made the VRM overheat so badly. A well-designed VRM should be able to handle fairly high case temperatures. This being a lower-end model motherboard, I wouldn't be surprised if many other corners were cut.
Originally posted by Behemot
Isn't that the single phase for HT, memory etc. controller?
No, that would be the cap and MOSFET close to the NB heatsink (that would be at the top of the picture that Pentium4 provided, under the CPU power cable - barely visible).
But yes, ASUS and a few others like to derive the voltage rail for the CPU<->NB HT link by means of linear regulation from the CPU V_core. Typically that's not a bad thing, unless the current requirement is high.
Now when ASUS uses the 3.3V rail to derive 2.5V for the RAM with a linear design (on older DDR boards) and then chains more linear rails to that 2.5V rail - that really pisses me off, because the pass-through MOSFET that regulates it gets mighty hot. 60C+ is not uncommon even with an open case in a cool room. Many older AsRock motherboards from the 754/939 and 775 era had that same problem too.
I took apart a dead power supply [the one with the samxon GF caps] and surprisingly only 1 cap was bad. [in total 2 parts had died]
The 2 parts that died are.
SR504 diode
SAMXON 1000uf 16v cap GF Line
I was surprised that only 1 cap died because samxon's GF line of caps is a bad line of capacitors.
So if 4 of the 5 GF caps are still good what should i do with them.
Maybe i should blow them up.
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