Tiido wrote on 2025-02-24, 00:35:
The photos are too low resolution to really tell anything (720 x 960 is not a lot especially if they are not closeups).
Got ya covered. I inspected the capacitors on the PCB. They are teeny tiny and in good health. No bulging or leaking.
dionb wrote on 2025-02-24, 12:01:Argh! […]
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Argh!
Sounds exactly as expected - except for the magic smoke 😦
A connector shape in no way guarantees that the pinout will be compatible; Compaq had some very incompatible 20p PSU pinouts with the same connector as ATX in the very period this came from. Don't assume it will be the same!
That said, the idea of putting a more modern PSU in there to deliver the same voltages to the system board makes a lot of sense - I've done similar mods before (most memorably: powering a Roland MIDI patchbay direct from +5V USB instead of via a big heavy transformer which needed 110V input)
Looking at the colours, I see yellow, red, white and black. If those are standard, that would be +12V, +5V, -5V and GND. I'd be pretty confident about the yellow and red, but white needs more checking of components on the PSU board.
Yeah, I have a couple of options if I can't try it with another PSU: Either spend a little bit more in another Compaq KVM I found on the same webside (different seller), or get one of those desk avocent I found on ebay. Only they come without cables and power brick. The cables I'm trying to keep those from the Compaq, hoping the seller will agree to a partial refund without needing to return anything (more for the fire scare than else), the power brick will be an addition to the final bill.
About the PSU that died, here's higher resolution pics I took with a Reflex. I hope they are clear enough. I would really love to, at least, test if the PCB is still alive and working, and that the PSU failing didn't kill it. That's why I would like to understand if a common ATX PSU can provide the correct voltages and power to it.
Also I really don't want to open the unit further unless it's to try a fix. The burnt smell that comes from the PSU is still pretty strong the second I open it. If I can't find a suitable PSU, I'll just keep the unit but will get rid of that stinky PSU.
(Pictures of the connectors on the PCB should be good alredy in the previous post)
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