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Advice requested - lifted pad during LC III recap

A dusty motherboard will show you when capacitors leak. I hate the ones that die without visual clues (no leaking or bulging).
What's the best way to handle one of the caps that die without visual clues? How would one go about figuring out what the problem is?

 
In my admittedly limited experience, the best way to tell if a capacitor is on its way out is to remove/replace it if you are uncertain if it is leaking or not.

Often other issues that crop up on the computer are due to the capacitors being faulty and/or affecting other components with their leakage, so that's one way to tell, but the problem isn't always replicated the same way for everybody from what I have observed. An exception might be with the SE and other compacts that get tell-tale issues with the display.

Sadly, this process is really just trial and error, though I suspect if your computer dates from 1994 or earlier, a cap replacement is probably overdue.

 
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If your 68k vintage mac has not been re-capped.  do it... regardless. ( wether it works or not )

We can beat up the topic,  but really it doesn't matter... change those caps.

Wether you Do it... or you have a friend do it...  or even if you are storing your collection for long term you can 

at-least remove the original caps then you know the goo will not leak out and rot things all to heck.

Once that goo leaks out and starts to rot things up, it makes the whole the whole re-cap process way worse.

 
If your 68k vintage mac has not been re-capped. do it... regardless. ( wether it works or not )
I agree with Uniserver, even the good looking capacitors are starting to leak on our old Macs, i have just recapped this morning a Classic LB, and waiting some caps to finish the job on a Classic II one.

https://68kmla.org/forums/index.php?/topic/24897-testing-20-sc-hard-drives/

BTW how did you lift a pad ? i cut the capacitors (removing the top of the canister) and so far haven't had any trouble.

 
Bibilit,

The pad did not lift when I was taking capacitors off the board. It lifted when I was cleaning the pads of the remaining solder and applying a new batch. After tinning my iron and adding flux to the pad, I went to apply a new dab of solder, and when I went to remove my iron, the pad just came with it! It was very strange, and very unfortunate!

Regards,

LazarusNine

 
Hello there,

So, the recap performed at the start of this thread never sat well with me. I couldn't stop thinking about those huge tantalum capacitors sitting on top of a poor soldering job. I wasn't happy with my improvised method of stretching out the solder on the cap whose pad I lifted. So, after I handed in my PhD thesis on Tuesday, I decided that the next thing that needed my attention was a re-re-cap. Let me just say a hot air reflow machine makes cap removal so much easier. Also, like Uniserver, I too feel that smaller ceramic caps are sometimes the way to go. I decided to run a trace wire this time rather than rely on a glob of solder to make the connection from the cap to the mobo. Any feedback on the ultimate result would be appreciated. Pleased to announce that the computer runs smoothly and passes its Apple diagnostic tests with flying colours. I'll leave it on all night just to give it time to break itself in.

Regards,

LazarusNine





 
Thats one nice cap job :)

I like the smaller ceramic caps too, they make it much easier to do a nice neat job

My only problem with them is that they get real expensive for the big values, so i tend to use ceramic for the 1uf and 10uf ones and Panasonic 'lytics for the 47uf and 100uf ones
 

 
yeah max i hear ya!!!

47uf and 100 uf ones can get up there pretty quick,

I'v been buying them by the 2500 / 2000 reel to get price down some.

I like TDK and Samsung.

 
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