CHOOSING THE RIGHT "2.5V/330uF & 6.3V/470uF" Tantalum Capacitors
and the
Importance of ESR and other factors for this method,
(I'm in no way an electronics engineer/expert, I only want to share my experience to help others)
I've opted for a full NEC Tokin replacement on my CECHA01, my plan is to preserve this unit as long as I can, I ordered this from Japan for around 30USD with a YLOD Condition (Delayed YLOD, so I have high hopes for this one). Upon receiving the unit, I opened it and replaced one Tokin chip for the RSX, and the system booted. I was very excited so I tested every game to fully stress the chips.
Last of Us - YLODed
Gran Turismo 6 - YLODed
Beyond Two Souls - YLODed on game data installation screen
CPU/GPU Temps were around 68-70c around 35% fan speed (So temps aren't the issue)
From my investigation, some games YLODed on their loading screens even without stress to the RSX Chip yet, so I thought the CELL Processor needed some cap replacements too, after replacement, every game worked flawlessly. But I didn't stop right there, since I wanted this unit to last very long, it was time to get a full replacement of the NEC Tokin. I wouldn't recommend this to other people since it can add more hassle. (But it can be worth it, if done right)
So I ordered more "
470uF - 6.3V" Caps, since that was the capacitors the main OP recommended.
After doing the full replacement, I noticed that the system won't boot anymore, it got stuck to YLOD again, this time it wasn't delayed, I got worried but with enough observation, I tried adding in more capacitors, 1 more to each NEC pads. so totaling to
40x 470uF Caps.
after doing all that, the system still was YLODing, but this time its delayed, so this means I was on the right track, (Do note I did not forget to add jumper wires, I only added two on one side, 1x for CELL and 1x RSX, i made sure that the gauge is thick enough to avoid overcurrent,
more on this later..)
I added another 1x Cap to each token, this time totaling to
48 Caps, It was a gamble up to this point since I am adding more capacitance than the intended values.
But to my surprise, the system worked well! it played every game I mentioned very well with no YLODs. From this point on, I was prepared to be settled and assembled the unit all in great perfect condition,
or is it...
A week later..
So I fired up the PS3 to play some sweet native PS2 games thru an HDMI outputted port (because hey why not, i shouldve just gone with slim if i wouldn't right?)
I noticed the system started YLODing again, and I was really worried, because it might've been the over-added capacitance, I did use 48 Caps lol. So I went investigating and redid the whole thing again, I added more jumper wires to each side, to evenly distribute the current, also to avoid burning the board with huge amperage. After finishing, still the same results. this time it was much worse than last week.
since I had an extra 52
"470uf - 6.3V" Caps from the bundled of 100pcs I ordered, i tried replacing them all again, and it works again just like the first timed I replaced it. BUT something was bothering me, what was the cause of the YLOD?
So I went online to investigate, first I tried checking the PDF spec sheet of the
NEC Tokin 0E128, as it says right here, there are few variants of this chip.
As you've noticed here, I encircled the ones with the closest spec to the original PS3's NEC Token - 1200uF / 2.5V
So I started wondering why the OP recommended a 6.3V instead of the original 2.5V one? Upon checking previous posts on this thread, some say it shouldn't matter, since it would only limit itself on the voltage given by the board, so around 2.5V on a 6.3V capacitor.
How about capacitance? Surely more capacitance could ruin the board right? I don't think so either since I replaced the NECs with the proper amount of capacitors and the system won't boot, so I added more totaling to
48 Caps.
I tried considering other factors, I compared the spec sheet of my ordered caps to the original NECs,
and there was definitely something wrong..
I noticed the ESR values (which is really crucial in this application since voltage ripple happens all the time when it comes to CPU/GPU chips) are way off in my ordered caps compared to the original NEC Tokens.
the NEC Token has "
1.5mOhms - 2.0 mOhms" on its rated ESR, compared that to 1 sample of the cap i ordered, and
BAM! 100mOhms per each cap.
Connecting them in parallel should reduce the ESR right? Yes, but the problem is each
NEC Pad is supposed to have 1.5-2.0mOhms, and I have
100mOhms of each cap? so connecting them together would result in
100mOhms/4 caps = 25mOhms, still way far off the original intended values. I even added two more and it resulted in 16.7mOhms still far off, remember we need 1.5-2.0! Lesser the better! it avoids the strain of pushing the current to the caps from small voltage adjustments needed by the chips
Sample pic of the caps I first ordered (best to avoid this one):
TCJX477M006R0100
But why did it work in my case the first time?
I considered the heating of the caps changed its tolerances, in this case, testing the PS3 just right after soldering the caps in, and in a week after, the caps have cooled down resulting in a different tolerance on capacitance and even in its ESR thus the YLOD. (I can even bet all these caps i ordered are in good condition, just having different ESR Values) (
ESR falls as the temperature increases)
Due to having higher ESR, this could lead the ps3 thinking the system is shorted, when the capacitors are not charged, it has a short amount of time of a zero resistance, until enough current pushed through then the resistance rises as the caps is charged. In this case, the ps3 won't continue to push more voltage/current since the caps are still in zero resistance state, thinking something might be shorted inside, thus instant YLOD.
I have found a lot more better caps with much less ESR values, up to just 10mOhms each, if divided by 4 capacitors, would result in 2.5mOhms! way much closer to the original.
So in order to fix this problem I have, I decided to order this one specifically:
https://www.mouser.ph/ProductDetail/Panasonic/2R5TPE330M9?qs=OE1iw1LrrPHigwp/AIDFFQ==
I ordered 40x 2.5V/330uF/9mOhms ESR Panasonic Caps, note I preferably want my voltages close to stock as possible.
These are decent Panasonic caps, which are designed to withstand high temps, this should be useful since the ps3 heatsink and the board are basically hot sandwich.
My chips should arrive on monday, hoping these will be the final fix on my system. Will provide more updates in order to help and guide others to order the right tantalum capacitors.
MY RECOMMENDATIONS!
I will be sharing a site which you can use as a reference if you ordered the right caps for your unit.
Link: https://www.mouser.ph/Passive-Compo...ors/Tantalum-Capacitors-Polymer-SMD/_/N-75hr2
(Note: It's up to the user to either order a "6.3V 470uF or a 2.5V 330uF", as long as the ESR is up to 9-10mOhms each)
Apologies for the long post, I wanted to share this to help people avoid ordering the wrong caps, since there are a lot of other factors of choosing the right one. Hope this helps!
im open for corrections if I said something wrong on this post! 