HowToFixComputers.com




Watched TopicsWatched Topics SearchSearch RegisterRegister Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages ProfileProfile Log inLog in
8RDA+ with failing caps

 
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Index -> Epox
Author Message
Lee M.
Guest





PostPosted: Sun Feb 04, 2007 9:23 pm    Post subject: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Just bought my kid's 8RDA+ and I see several of the caps are bulging with
some brownish crud on them. He hadn't said he had any problems, just wanted
a faster system. Once the caps start bulging, is there any timetable before
I might start seeing problems? My 6 yr old 8KHA+ does not have bulging
caps. The 8RDA+ will be in a backup computer, not my main machine. I will
probably only see 3-4 hrs a week of on time.
Back to top
Fix your Windows Problems - FAST.
FREE Safe Scan Registry Check. Locate & Fix Errors in Minutes!
dave
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Feb 05, 2007 1:55 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Nope, no timetable. I have two 8RDA+ systems and both have had the bulging,
spewing, bad caps problem. One began to not boot and I replaced the caps to
repair it. The other to this day is working fine with bad caps. My theory
is much of it depends on the quality of the power supply. In other words,
even if a motherboard has bad caps it may still function fine if the power
supply has very well regulated outputs.

DaveL


"Lee M." <lmacmil@forget_it.com> wrote in message
news:f9ydnQmgeu3WZ1jYnZ2dnUVZ_vShnZ2d@comcast.com...
Quote:
Just bought my kid's 8RDA+ and I see several of the caps are bulging with
some brownish crud on them. He hadn't said he had any problems, just
wanted a faster system. Once the caps start bulging, is there any
timetable before I might start seeing problems? My 6 yr old 8KHA+ does
not have bulging caps. The 8RDA+ will be in a backup computer, not my
main machine. I will probably only see 3-4 hrs a week of on time.


Back to top
Margaret
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Feb 05, 2007 4:03 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Lee M. wrote:
Quote:
Just bought my kid's 8RDA+ and I see several of the caps are bulging with
some brownish crud on them. He hadn't said he had any problems, just wanted
a faster system. Once the caps start bulging, is there any timetable before
I might start seeing problems? My 6 yr old 8KHA+ does not have bulging
caps. The 8RDA+ will be in a backup computer, not my main machine. I will
probably only see 3-4 hrs a week of on time.

Sigh... I loved my 8RDA+. One day I opened it up to maybe add a hard
drive, whatever, and I saw all those bulging brown caps. I RMA'd the
board and got a replacement from Epox. Even though it had new caps, it
lived a very short life before it developed probs that were unresolvable
despite careful troubleshooting. It ended up going in the trash. I'm
not saying that all refurbs are bad by any means, and who knows how long
I had before my bulging cap 8RDA+ would have shown probs. But in
retrospect, I should have kept it till it acted up. As a former
computer/net pro, I know better than to try to fix what ain't broke.
Live & learn, eh? ;-)

Regards,

Margaret
Back to top
Paul
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Feb 05, 2007 4:06 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

dave wrote:
Quote:
Nope, no timetable. I have two 8RDA+ systems and both have had the
bulging, spewing, bad caps problem. One began to not boot and I
replaced the caps to repair it. The other to this day is working fine
with bad caps. My theory is much of it depends on the quality of the
power supply. In other words, even if a motherboard has bad caps it may
still function fine if the power supply has very well regulated outputs.

DaveL

But the caps are used in places not directly connected to the PSU.
The caps on the output side of Vcore, are operating at the Vcore
voltage, in the neighborhood of 1.5V or so. So if those caps
malfunction, even the most manly power supply will not help them.

In some places on the motherboard, caps are used in a group. Each
cap carries some of the ripple current, which is the function of
a bypass cap. When one cap begins to bulge and no longer functions
correctly, the load is transferred to the good ones. Which can
accelerate their demise. So you may see some "correlation" in the
failure of caps, especially if they are carrying a heavy load.

And the caps can be replaced, but a repair person will likely
ask more for the work, than the replacement cost of the motherboard.
When cheap motherboards for other sockets are available at $50, you
cannot get much repair work done for $50. Only a dedicated hobbyist,
willing to do the work for free, plus someone paying for a handful
of caps, will be able to compete at the $50 level, and the
hobbyist will go hungry if he/she does too many of them.

I don't know anything about the person running this site. I got here
by entering the URL of another site that used to do repairs. At least
there is some info here, on how to do the repairs yourself, if you
are so inclined.

http://www.badcaps.net/tips/rem/

There is much lore in the selection of capacitors, and it is
surprisingly difficult to get your hands on some good ones. For
example, I can search down the part numbers of good ones, on
a capacitor manufacturer's web site, but not be able to find
them anywhere for sale. (Digikey, Mouser, and Newark are potential
places to get them.)

One other thing - the rating printed on the plastic sleeve (the
capacitance), is seldom the most important parameter. There are
other parameters, which are listed in the catalog for such parts,
that is part of the selection process. So when someone says
"use a bigger one with more microfarads", that is seldom correct
advice, at least on a motherboard. If selecting capacitors for
yourself, without help from sites like badcaps.net, you can get
some advice by downloading the datasheet for the switching regulator
chip, as they usually explain some of the tradeoffs between
the parameters like ESL, ESR, ripple current etc.

Paul

Quote:


"Lee M." <lmacmil@forget_it.com> wrote in message
news:f9ydnQmgeu3WZ1jYnZ2dnUVZ_vShnZ2d@comcast.com...
Just bought my kid's 8RDA+ and I see several of the caps are bulging
with some brownish crud on them. He hadn't said he had any problems,
just wanted a faster system. Once the caps start bulging, is there
any timetable before I might start seeing problems? My 6 yr old 8KHA+
does not have bulging caps. The 8RDA+ will be in a backup computer,
not my main machine. I will probably only see 3-4 hrs a week of on time.



Back to top
Davy
GURU
GURU


Joined: 30 Apr 2005
Posts: 1862
Location: Nr Manchester. UK

PostPosted: Wed Feb 07, 2007 12:35 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Rubycon 105 deg. C low ESR & Panasonic FC type's or better... avoid as already stated in using standard type's, Panasonic does make 125 deg. C type's all the better if you can get them. The must have the same value in uF, the voltage can be higher but obviously they must be the same size.

Rubycon caps seem to be pretty standard and are available from RS components for certain, along with Panasonic.

Davy
Back to top
Fix your Windows Problems - FAST.
FREE Safe Scan Registry Check. Locate & Fix Errors in Minutes!
dave
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Feb 12, 2007 5:22 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

If you case temp goes over 100c, the least thing you'll have to worry about
is the caps. Say goodbye to your hard drive.

DaveL


"Davy" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:12squoq8trfjqcf@news.supernews.com...
Quote:
Rubycon 105 deg. C low ESR & Panasonic FC type's or better...
avoid as already stated in using standard type's, Panasonic does make
125 deg. C type's all the better if you can get them. The must have
the same value in uF, the voltage can be higher but obviously they
must be the same size.

Rubycon caps seem to be pretty standard and are available from RS
components for certain, along with Panasonic.

Davy
Back to top
Lee M.
Guest





PostPosted: Tue Feb 13, 2007 12:13 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Interesting that the caps on my 5 or 6 yr old 8KHA+ (ver 2.0) are all fine
and many of the 2 year newer 8RDA+ caps are bursting at the seems.

"dave" <nospam> wrote in message
news:O4idnc86qrBWOVLYnZ2dnUVZ_vyunZ2d@comcast.com...
Quote:
If you case temp goes over 100c, the least thing you'll have to worry
about is the caps. Say goodbye to your hard drive.

DaveL


"Davy" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:12squoq8trfjqcf@news.supernews.com...
Rubycon 105 deg. C low ESR & Panasonic FC type's or better...
avoid as already stated in using standard type's, Panasonic does make
125 deg. C type's all the better if you can get them. The must have
the same value in uF, the voltage can be higher but obviously they
must be the same size.

Rubycon caps seem to be pretty standard and are available from RS
components for certain, along with Panasonic.

Davy

Back to top
Davy
GURU
GURU


Joined: 30 Apr 2005
Posts: 1862
Location: Nr Manchester. UK

PostPosted: Tue Feb 13, 2007 1:13 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

Quote:
[quote="Lee M."]Interesting that the caps on my 5 or 6 yr old 8KHA+ (ver 2.0) are all fine
and many of the 2 year newer 8RDA+ caps are bursting at the seems.


Are they those Green GSC ones.... ? big grin

Dunno if you seen this (a snippet from an earler post in 'News n' Stuff)
Taiwan made capacitors, apparently some industrial espoinage had been going on and during the process someone was given the wrong formula for the electrolyte, to cut a long story short this is a water based stuff which produces hydrogen and blows the vents on the capacitor spewing corrosive gunge which can eat away the copper tracks on the mobo.

This applies to all brands of capacitors made in Taiwan, in my case the green GSC types, this is not saying that all GSC capacitors are bad. (I had a bad cap in my Gigabyte mobo hence the article..... the later versions of the mobo uses different ones.)

The link below will explain all
http://www.niccomp.com/taiwanlowesr.htm

More interesting reading -:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,939887,00.asp
http://home.earthlink.net/~doniteli/index27.htm

Davy
Back to top
Mike
Guest





PostPosted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 10:28 am    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

I have the same board as you and I had the bulging caps. They caused
instability on my system. Eventually my machine would not boot. I
called Epox got an RMA number and they fixed my board or sent me
another with good caps. Now my rig runs better than it did when new.



On Sun, 4 Feb 2007 10:23:00 -0500, "Lee M." <lmacmil@forget_it.com>
wrote:

Quote:
Just bought my kid's 8RDA+ and I see several of the caps are bulging with
some brownish crud on them. He hadn't said he had any problems, just wanted
a faster system. Once the caps start bulging, is there any timetable before
I might start seeing problems? My 6 yr old 8KHA+ does not have bulging
caps. The 8RDA+ will be in a backup computer, not my main machine. I will
probably only see 3-4 hrs a week of on time.




Regards

Mike



Go Blackhawks!
Back to top
dave
Guest





PostPosted: Mon Feb 19, 2007 9:53 pm    Post subject: Re: 8RDA+ with failing caps Reply with quote

The caps that went bad in my two 8RDA+ boards were the green GSCs. The
black ones were fine so I did not change them.

DaveL


"Davy" <no@spam.invalid> wrote in message
news:12titt159erlg69@news.supernews.com...
Quote:
[quote="Lee M."]Interesting that the caps on my 5 or 6 yr
old 8KHA+ (ver 2.0) are all fine
and many of the 2 year newer 8RDA+ caps are bursting at the seems.


Are they those Green GSC ones.... ? :D

Dunno if you seen this (a snippet from an earler post in 'News n'
Stuff)
Taiwan made capacitors, apparently some industrial espoinage had been
going on and during the process someone was given the wrong formula
for the electrolyte, to cut a long story short this is a water based
stuff which produces hydrogen and blows the vents on the capacitor
spewing corrosive gunge which can eat away the copper tracks on the
mobo.

This applies to all brands of capacitors made in Taiwan, in my case
the green GSC types, this is not saying that all GSC capacitors are
bad. (I had a bad cap in my Gigabyte mobo hence the article..... the
later versions of the mobo uses different ones.)

The link below will explain all
http://www.niccomp.com/taiwanlowesr.htm

More interesting reading -:
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,4149,939887,00.asp
http://home.earthlink.net/~doniteli/index27.htm

Davy
Back to top
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    Index -> Epox All times are GMT
Page 1 of 1

 

 MemberlistMemberlist  UsergroupsUsergroups



Powered by p|-|pBB

Featured Sites: DIY Projects