- Apr 20, 2003
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Originally posted by: iloveme2
Also, which ones would I get?
All capacitors (that I've ever seen, anyway) have all of the important information written directly on them, like the voltage, impedance, etc. Just replace them with identical capacitors, but use good caps this time.Originally posted by: iloveme2
Also, which ones would I get?
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
If you value any hardware in that box I'd disconnect it from that motherboard.. who knows what's been damaged.
Can I RMA this thing? Got it from newegg. I think it's over a year old though. It was one of the first nforce mobos. Even if it's within warentee period what do I tell them? The mobo still "works" fine. No stability issues or anything like that.
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Also, which ones would I get?
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Also, which ones would I get?
Originally posted by: Mark R
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Also, which ones would I get?
None of those are appropriate. The voltage regulator capacitors on the mobo operate under very high stresses, and are specially designed for this type of circuit.
The mobo caps should ideally be replaced only with power-supply grade, very-high-ripple current, ultra-low ESR, high-temperature rated capacitors. If you use standard grade capacitors, you will get low-quality power (if any power at all), and they may only last a few weeks or months before they too start bursting.
By all means get capacitors with a higher capacitance rating (higher number of uF) or get ones with a higher voltage. Improving either of those 2 factors will, upto a point, improve ESR (which is of critical importance) but at greater cost and larger size.
Originally posted by: Tostada
Parts Express specifically lists their high-temp caps are for power supplies, but you guys feel free to pay $30 instead of $3 for your capacitors!
It makes me wonder how anybody can sell a reliable motherboard for under $100, if they need to spend $30 on just the capacitors for them to be good enough.
I'd RMA the board or just play it safe and buy a new one before I'd spend $30 to try and fix it myself.
Originally posted by: Tostada
What is wrong with you people??? When you quote a message, why don't you try removing some of the nested quotes now and then so you're not always making ridiculously large posts just to type one sentence at the bottom.
There's no reason for half the posts in this thread to have 4X nested quotes. Half of you "lifers" are brilliantly helpful, and the other half spam the forum to death.
Originally posted by: CraigRT
2 out of 3 mobos in my house have leaky caps... still working fine, and don't plan on swapping them out just yet.
it's been this long already! (a few months at least!)
A small group, like um, Epox, ABit, MSI (MSI is huge), ECS, Shuttle...Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Originally posted by: nightowl
He did not destroy the board. It was the manufacturer that used defective caps on the board that caused them to go bad. I have 2 boards that had caps that went bad and I had to replace them. What happened was that companies in Asia stole the formula for the fluid in the caps but the formula was flawed and now there are tons of boards that have caps that are failing.
I remember reading about this quite some time ago. Wasn't it limited to a certain small group of manufacturers? For some reason I think I remember being afraid that my NF7-S might blow up on me.
Bah, try it anyway. Or from the manufacturer. You might be suprised.Originally posted by: lavagirl669
Originally posted by: iloveme2
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
If you value any hardware in that box I'd disconnect it from that motherboard.. who knows what's been damaged.
Can I RMA this thing? Got it from newegg. I think it's over a year old though. It was one of the first nforce mobos. Even if it's within warentee period what do I tell them? The mobo still "works" fine. No stability issues or anything like that.
Neweggs RMA policy is 30 days....1 year is way too long, sorry.
Originally posted by: Cerb
A small group, like um, Epox, ABit, MSI (MSI is huge), ECS, Shuttle...Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Originally posted by: nightowl
He did not destroy the board. It was the manufacturer that used defective caps on the board that caused them to go bad. I have 2 boards that had caps that went bad and I had to replace them. What happened was that companies in Asia stole the formula for the fluid in the caps but the formula was flawed and now there are tons of boards that have caps that are failing.
I remember reading about this quite some time ago. Wasn't it limited to a certain small group of manufacturers? For some reason I think I remember being afraid that my NF7-S might blow up on me.
Not all will have had the bad ones.Originally posted by: CraigRT
Originally posted by: Cerb
A small group, like um, Epox, ABit, MSI (MSI is huge), ECS, Shuttle...Originally posted by: Fingolfin269
Originally posted by: nightowl
He did not destroy the board. It was the manufacturer that used defective caps on the board that caused them to go bad. I have 2 boards that had caps that went bad and I had to replace them. What happened was that companies in Asia stole the formula for the fluid in the caps but the formula was flawed and now there are tons of boards that have caps that are failing.
I remember reading about this quite some time ago. Wasn't it limited to a certain small group of manufacturers? For some reason I think I remember being afraid that my NF7-S might blow up on me.
my Solteks seem to be affected... my MSI is not
weird I say!
