"Xbox" and "capacitor." Two words you never want to hear in the same sentence.

"Xbox" and "capacitor." Two words you never want to hear in the same sentence.

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  1. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Whenever I come across one I replace it rather than just leaving the holes unoccupied.

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      OP's leaky capacitors are the CPU caps, they are actually required for console to function. It's only the clock capacitor which can be outright removed on most motherboards.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >haunted by my attempts to repair those caps only to mount one on backwards and destroy a perfectly good Xbox

  2. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Thankfully this is a pretty easy fix and not remotely expensive. Xbox is going to be the Turbo Duo of the 6th generation as far as repairs go but it's worth it, it's a great box.

  3. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    I lost two PC motherboards to 2000s capacitor plague. And they were little caps not those big PSU ones which are the most likely to fail.

  4. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Those big electrolytics are easy to deal with

  5. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    got lucky enough to get one that was in great condition, basically perfect other than the dead dvd drive

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      It won't be for long.

  6. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    A good quality electrolytic cap is rated for 30 years but some of these trash Chinese ones used in Xboxes had a lifespan of more like 3 years. Even so it depends on a lot of factors and many can and are still working well past 30 years. But usually as anon said the big PSU caps are the most likely to fail as they run hot and are under a lot of stress.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      I've known boomers with guitar amps from the 70s that still have the original capacitors.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        Different electrolyte formulation. In the 80s, we figured out how to make water-based electrolyte solutions for caps in order to reduce the cost. This is fine, so long as you don't have a bad run (like with the plague) or set your cap somewhere so hot that the electrolyte begins to literally evaporate.

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          In olden days they had caps made of oil wrapped paper. These were rather different from the modern type of electrolytic and would tend to dry out from non-use. Regular application of power was necessary to keep them working.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      well capacitors are based on hours of duration,sitting the capacitor next to the heat disipator was a bad idea,it was heating the capcitor all the time.
      so bad design per se along shitty quality capacitor and you get why they don't last.
      for example old capacitors of chine had 50k hours to 150k hours,japanese ones had a minimum 100k hours (loved the ibm new capacitors with over 300k hours of duration),then you had american ones with 5k hours to 20k hours top normally used on xbox.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        hours
        i will rather grab some unused ones from other electronics due to old capacitors made with 100k hours or 50k hours.
        The reason they fail is due to how the xbox work (being next to heat disipator) this is similar to having a PC with the PSU right over the GPU and CPU so the heat will go straight to the PSU.

        It's called a heatsink

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        The caps used in the Xbox were ether Nichicon or Sanyo, both are Japanese companies, moron.

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          All asians are the same.

          • 3 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            No they aren't the Sanyo caps used in the Xbox were ultra low esr, the only thing comparable today are the polymer caps.

          • 3 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            okay billy bob

  7. 4 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    Replace them with chemi-con 15000 hour caps APSC6R3ETD152MJB5S

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      hours
      i will rather grab some unused ones from other electronics due to old capacitors made with 100k hours or 50k hours.
      The reason they fail is due to how the xbox work (being next to heat disipator) this is similar to having a PC with the PSU right over the GPU and CPU so the heat will go straight to the PSU.

    • 4 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      hour
      so I can replace them again in 2 years? no thanks

  8. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    trivial fix
    get a soldering iron and replacement caps.

  9. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >lets take all these pcbs that would normally last forever and solder a bunch of chemical time bombs to them that will randomly explode at any time
    i hate capacitors

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      The funny part is they're not even necessary. You can just pull them out and your electronics will work just fine.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        OP's leaky capacitors are the CPU caps, they are actually required for console to function. It's only the clock capacitor which can be outright removed on most motherboards.

        they're necessary to ensure stable, smooth power to the components in the console

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          Just move somewhere with clean energy

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        The bigger, the more useless, yeah. Rip em out with your teeth anon.

        Kek, you think anyone on this board is smart enough to understand that joke?

        There's a few ee's around anon.

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Replace them with ceramic caps

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >ceramic caps
        >here's your 1.5 picofarads don't use them all in one place kid

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          Kek, you think anyone on this board is smart enough to understand that joke?

          • 3 weeks ago
            Anonymous

            >ceramic caps
            >here's your 1.5 picofarads don't use them all in one place kid

            explain pls

            • 3 weeks ago
              Anonymous

              Ceramics don't use chemicals so they last basically forever but their capacitance is orders of magnitudes lower than electrolytic capacitors.

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      graphene will fix it

  10. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    its an easy fix so whats the big deal?

  11. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    >"Xbox" and "capacitor." Two words you never want to hear in the same sentence.

    "I opened up my Xbox and replaced the faulty Capacitor"

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Replace all the capacitors, add ram, a faster CPU then sell the Xbox for $800.

      • 3 weeks ago
        Anonymous

        >a faster CPU
        Anyone here actually done that?
        Doing BGA soldering by hand seems like an absolutely massive pain in the ass

        • 3 weeks ago
          Anonymous

          I have done 1ghz cpus with just hot air and a pre-heater, it's a lot of prep work but the soldering is pretty easy

  12. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    these caps are for the clock right? do you have to replace them if you don't give a shit about the clock?

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      Those are CPU capacitors, they are needed for the Xbox to work.

    • 3 weeks ago
      Anonymous

      clock cap is right at the front of the board

  13. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    They are made to fail and should not exist.

  14. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    I like these caps, easy to remove
    I fricking hate the ones that are mounted to the board

  15. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    This happened to me as a kid. One day it just wouldn't turn on anymore. Thankfully GameStop warranty so I just took it in and they gave me another.

  16. 3 weeks ago
    Anonymous

    God, PCs of that era were absolute shite in this regard. Bad capacitors everywhere. The worst of the worst was the Dell Optiplex GX270. Literally about 50% failure rate at the time.

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