Re: Power supply build quality pictorial. part 2
Looking at your pix, I was tempted to post, "Where's the beef?!" But for a 250W rating, that actually isn't awful. As long as the input lytics are at least 330uF, it could do 200W reasonably OK-ish.
					Looking at your pix, I was tempted to post, "Where's the beef?!" But for a 250W rating, that actually isn't awful. As long as the input lytics are at least 330uF, it could do 200W reasonably OK-ish.
 Seems like that might actually be a valid concern… but it may not be, as there is also a large multi-turn single-mode choke on the input. So I imagine that could attenuate inrush currents perhaps. OK, I know what I can complain about – the tan/brown conductive glue.
 Seems like that might actually be a valid concern… but it may not be, as there is also a large multi-turn single-mode choke on the input. So I imagine that could attenuate inrush currents perhaps. OK, I know what I can complain about – the tan/brown conductive glue.  But it hasn't turned brown yet, suggesting the PSU has been running pretty cool.
 But it hasn't turned brown yet, suggesting the PSU has been running pretty cool. 
 In particular, these two are the output caps on the 12V rail – 2x Teapo SC, 16V, 2200 uF. I think that's probably the reason why the seller on eBat decided to “scrap” the system and sell it for parts. Shame, because this is a good PSU and was an easy fix overall. The motherboard is quite nice too and probably getting harder to find now.
 In particular, these two are the output caps on the 12V rail – 2x Teapo SC, 16V, 2200 uF. I think that's probably the reason why the seller on eBat decided to “scrap” the system and sell it for parts. Shame, because this is a good PSU and was an easy fix overall. The motherboard is quite nice too and probably getting harder to find now.

 ... well again, only if you're going to discard it. Otherwise, I probably can salvage one from the 10's of PSUs I already have. I tried one from a 5VSB circuit of a single-transistor PSU without feedback, but the pri. aux. winding voltage is lower. I made it work after some modifications, but the low pri. aux. voltage is inadequate for the PWM controller of the main PS.
 ... well again, only if you're going to discard it. Otherwise, I probably can salvage one from the 10's of PSUs I already have. I tried one from a 5VSB circuit of a single-transistor PSU without feedback, but the pri. aux. winding voltage is lower. I made it work after some modifications, but the low pri. aux. voltage is inadequate for the PWM controller of the main PS. 
							
						 
							
						 
 
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