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Gonna pop a cap in yo ass! | ||
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Description: Well, that's what my PC told me. Five capacitors in total are damaged. The best is the exploded one on the GFX card (a GeForce 4 128mb). The other four in the background were around the CPU. I know these are PC related, but we have caps in our Amigas too. When last did you check yours? If they are bulged on top or have a brown residue then they are bad. Thanks to Piru, PaSha and Castellen for advice...
Picture Stats: Views: 844 Filesize: 284.8kB Height: 768 Width: 1024 Posted by: X-ray at June 12, 2009, 10:20:28 PM Image Linking Codes
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rkauer Posts:3263 | October 11, 2007, 10:34:16 PM Leakage from caps are not corrosive, but have a worse side effect: it can loose the copper traces from the board itself! |
Oliver Posts:803 | January 20, 2006, 05:07:22 AM Not sure about being corrosive, but the chemicles still may not be good for you. Modern caps are a lot safer than older ones at least. As far as gas venting is concerned: change the caps. This shouldn't happen to properly functioning caps which are installed correctly. I would say it's faulty manufacturing to blame. For ordinary electrolitic caps, if you install them with reversed polarity, they can literally explode from gas build-up. They can right through the casing of the equipment, and have caused injuries before. I don't think this is the case here, but just wanted to let you know that gas production is a possibility. I'm aware of these problem caps on some Acer computers at my uni. However, they agreed to repair them under warranty, although I believe the warranty period had officially expired. Individuals may not receive the same level of service, but may be worth a try. These comps would make popping/clicking sounds prior to power cut or crash. It's a good idea not to wait too long to repair caps, as they can become very difficult to read when highly degraded. |
X-ray Posts:4370 | January 09, 2006, 04:17:28 AM Update: still going strong here, despite the messy job. I may have saved myself the expense of a new mobo! |
X-ray Posts:4370 | January 01, 2006, 01:20:07 AM @ Matt_H I can't find any reference to these things being corrosive on the specialist forum that deals with this. The gunge on my caps doesn't seem to be corrosive. I would say that the danger is failure. Have a look at BadCaps.net for examples of capacitor damage. |
Matt_H Posts:6411 | December 31, 2005, 11:47:45 PM Are these things corrosive and damaging like the batteries, or do they just cause the machine to not work? |
X-ray Posts:4370 | December 31, 2005, 01:22:50 PM @ cv643d: Well hold thumbs for me mate, because so far I sorted out that GeForce card with a similar capacitor (the new one is too big to replace the old one, so I have soldered it onto the reverse side.) The PC has been more problematic. I could only find monster 4700uF capacitors at short notice and I made a really sloppy soldering job getting them onto the mobo. At first the system was very unstable, then I redid some of the soldering joints and now the system has been fine for more than 24 hours. It is ugly as hell inside, but it works :-) |
cv643d Posts:1197 | December 30, 2005, 11:39:14 PM The problem is that manufacturers of PC motherboards and other hardware used bad caps a couple of years ago. Google the subject I'm sure you will find more info on this matter. These caps broke really fast. Myself, I lost a motherboard and a GF4-4200 card. I threw the motherboard out and tried to fix the graphics card but it didnt work with a new cap so I threw 200 dollars worth of graphics board in the trash to. |
MrZammler Posts:720 | December 30, 2005, 12:33:33 PM Had one on a 3com hub... it would literally make sound as if air got out? (not much knowledge of electronics stuff). It would work though... But, changed that in a bit and is fine now. |