Openai/691fd47a-4338-8002-8886-35bc70dbf9b5
This conversation was exported from ChatGPT[1]
gpt-5-1[edit | edit source]
User: why did this power supply board burn and smoke[edit | edit source]
why did this power supply board burn and smoke
Assistant: From the condition of the board in your photo, the most likely causes of burn + smoke come from common failures in smal…[edit | edit source]
From the condition of the board in your photo, the most likely causes of burn + smoke come from common failures in small SMPS (switch-mode power supply) boards. Here’s what I can see and what typically happens:
✅ 1. Most likely failure: Primary-side capacitor or MOV failure[edit | edit source]
On the top-left, the blue disk components (MOV surge suppressors) and the yellow “safety capacitor” look aged. If a MOV is overstressed by a power surge, it can short → pull huge current → burn and smoke.
Clues on your board:
- Blue MOVs look slightly darkened.
- Area near the AC input looks heat-stressed.
✅ 2. Transformer insulation breakdown[edit | edit source]
Your main SMPS transformer (center) shows brown stains / melted varnish. This means:
- Internal winding overheated
- Insulation melted
- Transformer began to arc internally → smoke
This is a VERY common failure when:
- The switching MOSFET shorted
- The controller IC ran full-power
- A primary capacitor dried up and caused voltage spikes
✅ 3. Shorted rectifier diode or switching transistor[edit | edit source]
On the hot side (right side of board), the large heatsink-mounted switching transistor or rectifier could have shorted.
A shorted transistor → huge current → burns the transformer and primary resistor.
You can see some darkened PCB around the hot-side components.
✅ 4. Electrolytic capacitor failure (common cause)[edit | edit source]
The SAMXON capacitor on the right side is a brand known for failures. If this capacitor went bad (ESR increases), ripple increases → MOSFET overheats → transformer overheats → smoke.
Even if it’s not visibly bulged, it may be internally failed.
✅ 5. Glue turning conductive[edit | edit source]
The yellow/brown glue around coils often becomes conductive and corrosive when old.
Your board clearly has old glue around the:
- output coil
- transformer
- capacitors
When conductive glue bridges traces → short circuit → smoke.
📌 Which component looks burned?[edit | edit source]
From the image, the transformer is the most obviously heat-damaged component, showing brown leakage/stains. This means something upstream (MOSFET, capacitor, or feedback circuit) caused an overload.
🚨 Final conclusion[edit | edit source]
Your power supply board likely burned due to a primary-side failure, most likely:
- Bad capacitor → unstable switching → MOSFET short → transformer overheated
- MOV surge suppressor failure
- Conductive glue causing a short
Once the MOSFET or transformer shorts, massive current flows—causing smoke.
If you want, I can: 🔧 Identify suspect components one-by-one 🔧 Guide you on what to test with a multimeter 🔧 Tell you whether this board is repairable or should be replaced
Just send a close-up picture of the burnt area or underside.
References[edit | edit source]
- ↑ "SMPS failure causes". ChatGPT. Retrieved 2025-11-27.