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purtnoy
Guest
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Posted:
Thu Feb 03, 2005 11:13 pm Post subject:
Motherboard caps |
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The CPU is not getting warm.
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Andy Cuffe
Guest
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Posted:
Fri Feb 04, 2005 6:57 am Post subject:
Re: Motherboard caps |
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On 3 Feb 2005 09:13:28 -0800, awknod@hotmail.com (purtnoy) wrote:
| Quote: | The CPU is not getting warm.
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It sounds like it's beyond repair then. If it's run too long with bad
caps it will damage other parts on the motherboard. Unless it's
something obvious like an overheated resistor, there's no practical
way to fix it.
Andy Cuffe
baltimora@psu.edu <-- Use this email address first
acuffe@gmail.com |
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CJT
Guest
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Posted:
Fri Feb 04, 2005 7:07 am Post subject:
Re: Motherboard caps |
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Andy Cuffe wrote:
| Quote: | On 3 Feb 2005 09:13:28 -0800, awknod@hotmail.com (purtnoy) wrote:
The CPU is not getting warm.
It sounds like it's beyond repair then. If it's run too long with bad
caps it will damage other parts on the motherboard. Unless it's
something obvious like an overheated resistor, there's no practical
way to fix it.
Andy Cuffe
baltimora@psu.edu <-- Use this email address first
acuffe@gmail.com
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The first thing to check is that the capacitor replacement was done
properly -- polarities were honored, no solder bridges were created
where they didn't belong, the board wasn't shorted when it was put
back in the case, etc.
Then debug as if it were a new motherboard. Start with nothing more
than is necessary installed (e.g. just a video card and some memory).
Since it was out of the case, something else may have been disturbed.
--
The e-mail address in our reply-to line is reversed in an attempt to
minimize spam. Our true address is of the form che...@prodigy.net.
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James Sweet
Guest
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Posted:
Fri Feb 04, 2005 10:07 am Post subject:
Re: Motherboard caps |
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"Andy Cuffe" <baltimora@psu.edu> wrote in message
news:b0i501tvkrqfsqnkfhg60cqv3ld73o99n0@4ax.com...
| Quote: | On 3 Feb 2005 09:13:28 -0800, awknod@hotmail.com (purtnoy) wrote:
The CPU is not getting warm.
It sounds like it's beyond repair then. If it's run too long with bad
caps it will damage other parts on the motherboard. Unless it's
something obvious like an overheated resistor, there's no practical
way to fix it.
Andy Cuffe
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There's still hope, check the voltage regulator sections, if you look up a
datasheet of the regulator chip you should be able to find a reference
schematic which will likely be very close to what's on the board. Not really
cost effective when you factor in time but if you like fixing things it
could be fun. |
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