• Updated 2023-07-12: Hello, Guest! Welcome back, and be sure to check out this follow-up post about our outage a week or so ago.

Duo 280c capacitor short

aladds

Well-known member
Not sure if anyone can help me here, but considering I don’t have many other options apart from a replacement motherboard at this point I thought I’d try anyway!

I was replacing the capacitors on my Duo 280c and there was a lot more goop than I realised. I thought I cleaned it all up (before my experiments with the LED backlight) and had some modern electrolytics instead (and seriously, the old ones were very bad.

Anyway today I got a sizzling noise and smoke, which is always fun. I’ve tidied the area as much as I can, I’ve discovered a shorted diode which I’ll replace (and for now is removed, I’m not going to power it on for a little while(!)) but I still have a dead short across C2 and C7.

Is someone else able to verify that this isn’t normal (and I totally imagine it could be when there isn’t any power, but it still seems kinda unlikely) or better yet I’d love a photo like the one below but without the…mess 😬
 

Attachments

  • 9E334206-DA6F-4BDF-B635-AF8354E5EDFD.jpeg
    9E334206-DA6F-4BDF-B635-AF8354E5EDFD.jpeg
    2.8 MB · Views: 25

glay78

Well-known member
Yes I ever recapped a duo board (can’t remember which) and it exploded twice, the 3rd time I soldered the caps in and I did not power up, I gave the board a wash and it works thereafter. There could be still flux underneath certain chips or caps I guess.
 
Top