IC1 in my Skynet A4000 PSU literally blew up in my face, thankful for eye protection

So, two questions, please.
1. I found several copies of the schematic, but the part number for IC1 is not given. I'd rather not have to figure out and "best guess" what the part is. Does anyone know? I can't find any photos of the Skynet PSU board that are clear enough to read the part number.
2. The A4000 was working fine. It had been restored by a reputable shop and the work was excellent on close inspection. The PSU was cleaned but NOT recapped. The motherboard was cleaned and recapped. There was essentially no battery damage, yay.
a. I installed new 3.2.2 ROMS and an A3660 CPU board. Nothing else changed.
b. I turned it on, and there was no power LED nor HD LED.
c. I disassembled some, tried again, same. I neither saw nor smelled smoke, nothing was remotely warm, much less hot.
d. At this time, I noticed that neither the CPU cooling fan nor the PSU cooling fan ran when powered.
e. I disconnected all the power connectors and tried the PSU on its own. Nothing.
f. I tested resistance from all the power lines to ground on the motherboard and on the PSU connector and found no short circuits.
g. I opened the supply and saw the fuse was blown.
h. I replaced it with the specified 5A 250V fuse, turned it on and the fuse immediately blew and I saw a flash out of the corner of my eye near the two big filter caps and transformer. I saw no
damage or discoloring anywhere in the area on the PCB and nothing looked visibly damaged.
i. I removed the PCB, tested the caps in place with an ESR meter and ohm meter. They seemed "ok", but I noticed C6 looked like it was bulging a bit.
j. I reflowed a couple of sketchy joints and snipped a couple of very long lead ends, but there was nothing visually amiss on the solder side of the PCB.
k. I installed a new fuse and disconnected the fan (the shop who did the restoration installed a new quieter fan) just in case it was a problem.
l. The fuse immediately blew and IC1 decided to exit this life in a blaze of glory.
Any thoughts as to where I should begin trouble shooting? I thought I'd start by replacing the polarized capacitors, but this problem just seems weird. I strongly suspect it wasn't anything I did on the motherboard, i.e. the A3660 and ROMS, but I don't want to fall victim to confirmation bias either. I just don't want to think or believe I've torched my motherboard
I have an ATX supply I bought for a future Amiga project and have an ATX to A4000 adapter cable on order, but until I get the adapter, I'd love to see if I can get this PSU working again.
Much thanks for any help or ideas!
David