It was a pandemic project... I bought a new ESR meter and I had a new, shiny soldering station standing around I never really used. The particular CP750 was collecting dust on the shelf and I had to decide to get rid of it or to give it a shot, so I did.
I limited myself to all non-SMD capacitors. SMD capacitors are of the ceramic type, not that they never fail, but their failure mode usually is a hard fail.
I did in-circuit testing, which isn't ideal and often fails, but in that case, I simply replaced the capacitor all together, to reduce overhead. In the end, the thing came back to life...
Yeah, I even did give it a proper ultrasonic rinse to get the flux off.
It was a lot of work, a lucky shot and no, it's not commercial viable, especially not for a guy that solders as slow as I do...
I limited myself to all non-SMD capacitors. SMD capacitors are of the ceramic type, not that they never fail, but their failure mode usually is a hard fail.
I did in-circuit testing, which isn't ideal and often fails, but in that case, I simply replaced the capacitor all together, to reduce overhead. In the end, the thing came back to life...
Yeah, I even did give it a proper ultrasonic rinse to get the flux off.
It was a lot of work, a lucky shot and no, it's not commercial viable, especially not for a guy that solders as slow as I do...
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