[olug] Bad Power Supply - This looks bad
Daniel Linder
dan at linder.org
Thu Jan 27 22:48:40 UTC 2005
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<quote who="Eric Lusk">
> I just pulled the PSU out of my workstation, it had
> started to make a squealing noise, and I was planning
> on just replacing a fan and putting it back.
> The affected pins are 6, 19, and 20, all which provide
> +5v DC, needless to say the PSU isn't going back into
> the system, and I'm keeping an eye on the on I put in
> as a replacement.
> http://www.ericshaus.com/webpics/psu/DSCF0001.JPG
> http://www.ericshaus.com/webpics/psu/DSCF0002.JPG
<HUMOR>
You're absolutly right. Any power supply connector that looks that
"fuzzy" is just bound to give problems! (If you haven't looked at the
.JPGs above, you won't get the joke...)
</HUMOR>
Ok, war-story time...
1: I was helping a friend upgrade his parents business computers (from old
286 to "new" 386-40's or 486-somethings). Anyway, we took the cover off
one and the BIOS chip on the motherboard was completely black! The area
directly over the silicon chip itself was melted and warped, and the
sticker on the chip was burned beyond recognition. The system itself ran
fine, but if I hadn't seen it I would have thought the MB wouldn't even
POST...
2: A friends computer was acting funny after a lightning storm and the
CD-Rom had quit working. We opened it up and saw that a *single* wire
down the middle of the ribbon cable going from the MB to the CD-Rom was
completely exposed. Since the ribbon cable on either side was singed
severly, our only guess is that the path of least resistance to whatever
hi his machine went through the MB, the cable, and then out the CDRoms
grounding pin. Very weird.
Dan
- - - - -
"I do not fear computer,
I fear the lack of them."
-- Isaac Asimov
GPG fingerprint:9EE8 ABAE 10D3 0B55 C536 E17A 3620 4DCA A533 19BF
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