A friend of mine called me to pass-by his place to check out
his Decoder which was faulty, I passed by and the decoder was dead as dodo.
Usually in electronics dead symptoms are mostly caused by
power supply, therefore I suspected problem with the power supply.
I did not have my tools with me and therefore I did not open
the decoder on site, back to my workshop I opened it and the first thing I did
was scanning for any sign of stress (blackened area or burnt components).
Everything looked good and I was about to pull my digital
meter to do some voltage testing when I noted a capacitor on the secondary side
of the power supply which had it top slightly swollen.
As I said previously and I repeat again, any capacitor with
swollen top is usually faulty, this usually happens when the working voltage of
the capacitor is exceeded.
From basic electronics we know that a capacitor contain two
plates (conductors) separated by a thin layer of insulating material called
dielectric.
If the working voltage of the capacitor is exceeded this insulator
will get damaged and hence the capacitor will short circuit and hence get
damaged completely.
For the capacitor in our case, you realize that it was used
to filter the secondary source (12Volts), therefore when this capacitor shorted
means it created a jumper (short) between the 12 volts line and the ground.
As you know a short on the secondary side of a switch mode
power supply (S.M.P.S) can block the supply from starting and therefore I decided
to replace the capacitor and see if there is any improvement.
After changing this one capacitor and powered ON, the decoder
came back to life and I was a happy man so was the customer.
Thank you guys
See in the next class
Thanks for your knowledge on capacitors and its behaviour.
ReplyDeleteThanks and welcome Amos.
ReplyDeleteRegards Humphrey
We all are support you ever
ReplyDeleteThanks Hussnu
DeleteRegards Humphrey