The power supply as the picture shows, the resistors lose color code, do you have the color code of resistor values R08, R09, R10, R11 to share with me, you see the attached image
File sharing and storage made simple
File sharing and storage made simple
File sharing and storage made simple
File sharing and storage made simple
Good luck with that, you'll probably need it.
That has got to be the cheapest, nastiest ATX power supply I've seen in a long while. The board calls it an "ATX-320", which is probably a more accurate representation of its power capabilities. Input filtering appears to be absolutely minimal - the otherwise usual common-mode choke has been done away with, and I see one part that may be other a MOV or a line capacitor. (This one probably would not pass EMI regulations in many areas of the world.) The heatsink is not what I would call massive either.
It's pretty amazing that someone would still have been designing something like this in 2012, the specs suggest more like 2004 to me. Only 10 A on +12 V? An FSP / Sparkle FSP250-60PFN from the early 2000s (nominal 250 W) is specified with 13 A! No combined power spec in sight either.
I would suggest finding a higher-quality replacement, even if it's an older one that might need a new capacitor or two. This thing is just garbage right out of the factory.
That has got to be the cheapest, nastiest ATX power supply I've seen in a long while. The board calls it an "ATX-320", which is probably a more accurate representation of its power capabilities. Input filtering appears to be absolutely minimal - the otherwise usual common-mode choke has been done away with, and I see one part that may be other a MOV or a line capacitor. (This one probably would not pass EMI regulations in many areas of the world.) The heatsink is not what I would call massive either.
It's pretty amazing that someone would still have been designing something like this in 2012, the specs suggest more like 2004 to me. Only 10 A on +12 V? An FSP / Sparkle FSP250-60PFN from the early 2000s (nominal 250 W) is specified with 13 A! No combined power spec in sight either.
I would suggest finding a higher-quality replacement, even if it's an older one that might need a new capacitor or two. This thing is just garbage right out of the factory.
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