I remember hearing that a first run of the original XBOX had a problem with
solder joints on the power supply socket. plugging and unplugging would put
stress fractures in the solder and traces until it got loose enough to break
and/or short. MS decided to release a GFI-like power cord to customers with
this model XBOX to correct the problem. could this stress/breakage be a
possibility? one must also consider metal debris could have entered the
connector or contacted between the solder contacts. if it is thin or small
enough by the time its already shorted it could've evaporated (I've seen
this with a metal wire twist tie that got between two mains contacts)
-Joe
On Sun, Mar 20, 2011 at 2:40 PM, Tony Duell <ard at p850ug1.demon.co.uk> wrote:
I was given a DELNI recently, but it did not seem to work so I unplugged
it
for later inspection. I just plugged it in now
and it went up in smoke,
knocking out all the sockets in the house. I have opened it up and the
Presumably this tripped a main circuit breaker. Was it an over-current
breaker or an earth leakage device (GFI?)?
curious thing is that none of the capacitors has
or any other component
of
the PSU is showing any signs of damage, there is
scorching only around
the
socket itself.
Did any fiuse in the deviec blow? I would remove and test all of them.
Normally a catastrophic failure in a power supply will blow at least one
fuse (after blowing numerous expenisve transistors :-))`
Is the mains input sokcet a simple connefotr, or is it the mains filter
as well? The latter type will have a metal can on the back side,
sometimers with a scheamtic of the inductors and capacitors inside
printed on it.
If the connector does contain a main filter, it's entirely possible one
of the capacitors decided to short at the wrong moment.
Another possiblilty is leakeage on the socket itself. Dampness might
cause this (particularly if it was a GFI that tripped, it doesn't take
much current to do that). Or a conductive trace across the plastic of the
socekt (known as 'tracking'), caused by arcing or somethign like that.
Obviosuly you need to replace the socket. If it was my devices, I would
check all the sceicondcutors and low-value resistors on the primary side
of the PSU to see if I could find a problem there. I'd also check the
main filter components (f not part of the socket) and do a high-voltage
insulation text.
-tony