kotel wrote on 2024-08-21, 08:19:
The short has also went away after disassembly.
Assuming there actually was a short (see last paragraph), this sounds like some part connected to neutral touching the grounded case. Disassembling would remove that short circuit. Check the neutral wire for puncture or for excessively long component lead ends on the solder side that might touch the case.
kotel wrote on 2024-08-21, 08:19:
Fuse seems okay (o.03 ohms).
This makes the hypothesis of failed semiconductors on the primary side unlikely. Failed semiconductors usually blow the fuse. OTOH, if the main breaker of your circuit is acting way faster than the fuse, there might be a chance of the fuse not being blown even if a primary semiconductor (bridge rectifier, high-voltage MOSFET) failed.
kotel wrote on 2024-08-21, 08:19:
In the first picture it looks like there is a burnt trace, but there is still copper underneath.
In case of doubt, measure. Are you talking about the trace in the top left of that picture? I don't think it looks "burnt", but the solder resist (the green stuff) has been scratched away. In a closed box, there shouldn't be anything scratching away solder resist, so should investigate whether the case is bent or something like that. As that trace is on the secondary side, damaged solder resist should not be able to trip a breaker (including GFCI ones). Anyway, if solder resist is required for the isolation to be sufficient, there is some root fault. Solder resist is not regarded as sufficiently robust to provide saftety-critical isolation.
kotel wrote on 2024-07-08, 09:21:While back it would shutdown after 1 second when I shorted PS_ON with GND.
This might be an indication that the 5VSB supply is marginal and the extra load caused by shorting PS_ON (supplied from 5VSB) to GND causes it to fail.
kotel wrote on 2024-08-21, 08:19:
Test 1 fails. The PSU doesn't generate any voltage (no PS_ON, 5VSB).
This might be an indication that the marginal 5VSB supply is now entirely dead. The 5VSB supply is on the vertical PCB on the left in your second picture. On the mains side (the lower side), I see a 50V, 47µF capacitor that is used to supply the control chip. Failure of that capacitor is a standard cause for a supply to degrade gradually until it stops working completely.
kotel wrote on 2024-07-08, 09:21:Measuring in the AC input, I found that the live wire had around 100mV to earth
Please explain what you mean by that. If you measured in voltage mode, this is completely fine and does not indicate a short. The meter indicates how much voltage is currently in the circuit. You measured residual charge of an interference suppression cap. On the other hand, if you measure in "diode check" or "continuity test" mode, the meter also displays a voltage, but in this case, it is the amount of voltage required to push a test current of about 1 to 10mA from one end to the other. The intended use case for that value is testing the voltage required to "turn on" diodes, which is about 0.6-0.7V for silicon diodes. If you measure 100mV "forward voltage" between live and earth (aka ground), something is very fishy and needs to be fixed for safe operation.