Wave gives good advice, these PSUs use a two-transistor circuit for +5VSB that will fry the mobo if its related small caps go south.
The '+5VSB critical caps' he's referring to are not the two larger +5VSB output filtering caps (marked 'F'), but the smaller caps around them (marked 'C').

The two tiny caps above (marked 'D') are on the switchers driving circuit and if they fail the PSU will go FUBAR. So recapping them isn't a bad idea (though they are a royal PITA to handle 😠 , being so buried between the isolation transformer and the primary heatsink).
These PSUs are heat furnaces because efficiency is atrocious 😵 . The oversized minimum load resistors located between the secondary caps aggravate the problem. So they need overkill cooling and good 105C caps to be reliable (but most or all were built with crappy caps).
Also this PSU is probably overrated, '33' transformer and I guess '13007' main switching transistors mean ~250W tops, and fireworks above that.
These Oh Deer! PSUs had a bad reputation but once recapped and with better cooling they become reasonably passable for low-draw retrocomps, voltage regulation and ripple are acceptable.
http://ixbtlabs.com/articles2/power/rk-psu11.html
^ Scroll down to 'LC-B300ATX' and 'LC-B350ATX'
Mine, like yours in the pic, even sports PI coils for -12V and -5V. Luxury! 🤣

- EDIT:
... powers my Pentium 4 HT.
These PSUs are old-style +5V heavy and usually come with weak +12V rectifiers (mine came OEM with just a 10A superfast 😵 ), not the best recipe for +12V hungry P4s. I'd better use it to power PII/PIII or Athlon Classic stuff.