Yes Sir, I mentioned that in the other thread I linked earlier for others who may tackle the job. The capacitor also typically has a strip down its body to help distinguish its orientation. I dont know if you meant to quote me or the guy who is having an issue repairing his but I was able to successfully repair mine by replacing the caps.Not knowing your level of electronic stuff, you do know that there is a positive and negative side to a capacitor. If it's a new capacitor, the longer lead (wire) is the positive side. Obviously, they need to be installed properly as well, knowing what connection is the positive and negative connections.
Ive replaced many caps over the years and I used to buy them in quantities off ebay. sometimes Id end up with some poor quality caps and I dont know your electrical background but you might know there was a period of years in the early 2000s where a lot of sub quality garbage caps were put into everything from Dell computers to samsung and lg tvs (most were branded as "Samwa")
There was even a class action suit against samsung due to all the failures. If a person told me they had a certain model lg or samsung at that time that needed repair I could typically diagnose and know wht caps I needed before even opening them up due to the same failures being so common same with the 2200uf caps on Dell motherboards. We had equipment that was licensed to the mac address of the main board and it was a half day process to reload the OS and re license the software which would also only work on a certain series of dell optiplex pcs. Not to mention the customer had to pay $3200 for that obsolete dell through "proper authorized channels" So it became standard practice for me to replace the caps with better quality versions and prevent the issue from returning which was what would happen if we just ordered another new dell pc at the time. (Since they were all new old stock with the same subpar caps) Ive also likely replaced at least 100 1000uf caps in various power supplies over the years.
Its not always caps that fail but thats typically the most common thing to go with age.
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