Hi Trippynet,
I'm still new at this...so don't take what I say as gospel. I'm trying to learn this stuff to perform PSU repairs myself, but I'm still a beginner.
However I recently thought about your stated symptoms and I'm wondering if it's a special kind of failure related to the components heating up. If they haven't touched any of the semiconductors, then they should. I'm currently guessing you may have what's known as a "leaky output diode". It's not a literal leak like a capacitor (something you can't see), it means it's passing voltage at a point where it shouldn't normally. The output diodes are the thing that actually makes the basic dirty DC (as we know it) at the other side of the transformer (chopper) at the beginning of the second half of the PSU (lower voltage). Each voltage line should have one or a pair of them in a single body. They allow only a range of voltage to flow, cutting off the rest of the chopped up inverted-sine wave (filtering really), which produces a gentle, narrow, wave in a tight DC range...that is later smoothed by output caps and inductors, etc.
The output diodes can just be leaky, or in very rare causes, they become leaky went heated. Most of the time the leak occurs very high up on the voltage range where they is some kind of internal breakdown of the biasing material.
I've been told by the interwebs, that the symptoms of a leaky output diode is a sudden spike in voltage, which should trigger the over-voltage protection on the PSU and do an immediate shutdown.
I took your words literally when you said 30-90 minutes, then it turns off, I assume you mean like someone pulled the plug...not like the system claims it's now shutting down :-)
I would have them replace all your output diodes, there aren't that many in the PSU, they aren't pricey...but a little tough to get to physically.
If they have replaced all your caps, and have done basic resistor checking and your system runs for some time, then I think it's a semiconductor breakdown during heating, it's rare but it does happen. And you have several of these lines, any one of the lines going high voltage will cause this shutdown.
They are asking to bench-run the PSU to be able to test for things like this (ripple, bad power, failure under load, etc)…but if we KNEW how the darn things could be started...we'd be doing this ourselves. I’d say the easiest way would be to hook the PSU up to the station and just use an oscilloscope with logging to check ripple and over current right on the chassis while it’s running.
But short answer is, if they are willing to source, insulate, and install new fast output diodes, I would do that. I have a hunch that’s the right direction to go in.
My two cents, good luck!
-Weblacky
(10-22-2019, 02:07 PM)Trippynet Wrote: Well, it's a longish story.
Sent it to them for repair, got it back and it still kept dying after 30 minutes or so.
Sent it back to them (1 year warranty), came back and seemed much better. But after prolonged testing, i found it keeps dying after 90 minutes or so now.
Sent it back again (keen to ensure it is fully fixed before the 1 year warranty expires). They've had it a while, but now say that they're struggling to test it. My expectation so far is that they re-capped it the first time, I know they replaced a few resistors the second time that didn't seem to give the expected ratings, but I expect up until now that they've not been able to power the thing up and give it a thorough test - they've just replaced bits that look troublesome before sending it back.
I imagine they're getting sick of me sending it back to them so actually want to power it up for a while to make sure it works, which suits me - but I wish they'd done this earlier.
I did find the bits from Luke earlier, if all else fails I can tell them that - however I thought I'd check in case anyone has a more comprehensive pin-out of the supply first.