On Sat, 27 Aug 2016 19:53:54 +0200, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
More or less all the repairing I had to do myself or in
some cases
was done by a friend, within the last years, was replacing capacitors
in new switched-mode power supplies, that were running for around 1 to
3 years. They were simply undersized by voltage, they were neither bad
manufactured, nor did they dry out, they bloat and short. This
wittingly predetermined breaking point is a real plague. For example
my Behringer Eurorack UB2442FX-Pro suffered from this issue. It's not
just some no-name power supply, it's a Behringer designed power
supply. ISO 9000 is fraud against customers and criminal against the
environment, those products that failed usually advertised their
quality management. 30 years old conventional power supplies with good
voltage size, but aged leaking capacitors, that don't provide the
original capacity anymore usually don't cause any issues. We usually
don't notice that the capacitors for a lot of gear are already broken.
Leaking isn't good, it's better to replace those capacitors, but
leaking capacitors not that often cause noticeable issues, especially
not the two kinds of voltage stabilizing capacitors, either smoothing
capacitors (Glättungskondensatoren) and bulk capacitors, decoupling
capacitors or what ever you name (Stützkondensatoren) capacitors for
stabilisation. Yes, if they aren't good anymore, they could cause
disastrous effects, but I suspect they are broken for a long time
without causing a noticeable effect and if the effect becomes
noticeable, than I suspect that it's more or less always noticeable
and not just by random.
YMMV!
Ralf
PS: Not to mention that the more important bulk capacitors aren't
electrolytic ;).