Wester547 wrote:It depends on how the capacitors fail.
Problematic ripple voltage can often go unnoticed for months on end by the user as if the capacitors are spec'd well enough on the motherboard the filtering there can make up for it just for a bit.
Yes. Delta/Newton used the two-transistor +5VSB circuit in their PSUs all the way up to 2005. Most of those OEM Dell units that are Newton do have two-transistor circuits and even worse have the critical capacitor - often it's a 47-100uF 25V or 50V LTEC TK or TH, LZG, Taicon VT, or PJ. If you're fortunate it's something like Nichicon PJ or Rubycon YXF. The original Xbox power supplies, either a Foxlink branded Delta or plain Delta, also used a two transistor +3.3VSB circuit, possibly with the critical capacitor either being a Teapo SEK or something else... even worse, often, the +5VSB/+3.3VSB transistor was not heatsinked, though it would often be a MOSFET that has the metal tab at least. Yet I've never seen discoloration on the PCB after years of +5VSB/+3.3VSB use in those units so Delta must have done something right or better than the other manufactures who defer to two-transistor circuits. I guess using a MOSFET that has an extremely low ON resistance could help but even still...LongRunner wrote:I'm not even sure why well-known manufacturers used the two-transistor +5VSB circuit for as long as they did, as technically superior switching ICs have existed since at least 1996 (TOPSwitch).
Capacitors aren't really predictable with regard to the manner in which they fail, though. Electrolytics, I mean, at least the really cheap ones - sometimes they can fail so catastrophically that they will not only preclude the board from POSTing but they will often blow MOSFETs and possibly even cause discoloration to the motherboard. It's never a good idea to put any trust to failing capacitors.Another possibility involves mixing electrolytics and polys (or potentially ceramic capacitors if they're in close enough proximity) on a VRM output. As the electrolytics fail, the polys take over.
Wester547 wrote:...Foxlink branded Delta...
Capacitors aren't really predictable with regard to the manner in which they fail, though. Electrolytics, I mean, at least the really cheap ones - sometimes they can fail so catastrophically that they will not only preclude the board from POSTing but they will often blow MOSFETs and possibly even cause discoloration to the motherboard.
To my knowledge, Foxlink either contract Deer or Delta/Newton to build their power supplies... clearly, the power supplies in the original Xboxes weren't Deers. They often had similiarities to Deltas (the Foxlinks), such as the type of input coils used (exactly the same coils), the type of standby circuit, and the underside had a soldering job very very similar to that of Delta's. Also, the Foxlink model numbers end with a PS (FTPS) just like Delta and Newton's units do (NPS/GPS/DPS/DPSN). I get that Lite-on also sort of shares that similarity but still.LongRunner wrote:Wester547 wrote:...Foxlink branded Delta...
I thought Foxlink was a separate company.
Wester547 wrote:To my knowledge, Foxlink either contract Deer or Delta/Newton to build their power supplies... clearly, the power supplies in the original Xboxes weren't Deers. They often had similiarities to Deltas (the Foxlinks), such as the type of input coils used (exactly the same coils), the type of standby circuit, and the underside had a soldering job very very similar to that of Delta's.
They look almost entirely different save by the "130" numbering I usually see partaking Delta transformer labels. I don't think Foxlink power supplies are made by Delta anymore, though, looking at the internals of their other power supplies yields too vastly different a design as the previous edit mentioned.LongRunner wrote:Wester547 wrote:To my knowledge, Foxlink either contract Deer or Delta/Newton to build their power supplies... clearly, the power supplies in the original Xboxes weren't Deers. They often had similiarities to Deltas (the Foxlinks), such as the type of input coils used (exactly the same coils), the type of standby circuit, and the underside had a soldering job very very similar to that of Delta's.
What do the transformers look like??? Do they have the Delta-style no-tape-around-the-core construction???
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