As we reach the 10th anniversary of c_hegge's first el-cheapo round-up, I decided to have a go myself; I don't have a proper load tester yet, but I have more than enough resistance wire (from broken heaters) to rig up whatever loads I need
I briefly mentioned them in my
thread regarding the 'proper' (which is to say, usable in an old computer after recapping) Macrons, but anyhow, I dug this out of my shed (hence the corrosion on the screws and coils) to put out of its misery: It has 2SC4242 switchers (7A rated, normally found in half-decent units up to 200W) and the secondary rectifiers are an SBL1640CT for +3.3V, SBL3040PT for +5V, and STPR1020CT for +12V (plus F06C20C for +5VSB, same as in the MPT-301); each just good enough for the label rating.
I actually borrowed the casing (not shown) from an MPT-301, but suffice to say that it's mostly the same (the gutless versions just have some single-insulated AC wires, where they are double-insulated in the MPT series). Even the fan is the same, actually. However, the main PCB has 1kV ceramics instead of Y class; I can't say I trust the transformers either, though the platform
would have allowed half-decent (for the era) units to be built (the ATX9912P, and then ATX0103P, just revised a few things from it). Primary capacitors claim to be 470μF, but actually measure 330μF
; other than that, much the same capacitor choices as in the MPT series (just a few different values). Only the +3.3V wires on the main ATX are 18AWG, the rest are 20AWG. In this unit I replaced the 2A input diodes with a PBL405 years ago, but I don't think that changed the results too much
Nor should my removal of the −5V cap.
I tested yesterday, but waited a day so I could take the photos in natural light.
At the oscilloscope connection point, I used 10μF 25V X5R ceramic capacitors (with wire leads, made by TDK) which I have to hand, a bit optimistic compared to ATX specification (100nF ceramic + 10μF electrolytic) but if anything perhaps a better match for what modern hardware actually has (though I would still follow the spec for any official review); since I don't have the connectors, I just cut and hard-wired for now. I've also rigged up a 3Ω mains series resistor (inside the casing from a 150W PS/3 PSU, using the original inlet and pass-through outlet and a fan which can be externally powered; perhaps an internal 12V SMPS in the future) to limit fault currents to below what will trip my circuit breaker (C16; to do it properly, I'd set up a dedicated circuit for testing).
I arranged +3.3V 10A, +5V 15A×2 (one half switched) and +12V 8A loads; altogether, slightly under the claimed rating (give or take).
Even so, +12V ripple was well over the limit (although +5V ripple was within spec), though this may be partly down to the age of the caps (even so, they don't measure
terribly bad on the Atlas ESR+). It failed quietly after 1 minute 17 seconds - one switcher shorted collector-to-base (you can see that its insulation bushing is melted slightly). Despite that, the other switcher and the fuse remained intact (and +5VSB still worked). But no fireworks, what a pity
An even more-gutless Macron was sold as a Bliss MPT-A250W (other Bliss units from other OEMs can be found among c_hegge's reviews), based on the ATX9806
A-P platform (which used a 7805 for +5VSB, 0.8A as was a typical rating then); label claimed +3.3V 14A (SBL1640CT used), +5V 25A (S16C40C used), and +12V 10A (F06C20C used), but I didn't even bother putting it back together as it'd probably burn the rectifiers first.
Anyway, the primary capacitors (330μF "JP", not CEC or JPCON) were bulging…
For comparison, I actually donated an MPT-301 to c_hegge for the 2014 el-cheapo round-up;
it (if you can't recover the pictures yourself, I can reupload from the copy I saved for reprocessing) not only delivered the label rating, but even survived an overload to 350W.
So in that respect Casing Macron seems a bit like CWT; capable of making decent units, but not above doing gutless wonders if ordered to.
Though I so far don't know of them having designed a platform
exclusively for garbage…