Good day folks. Pretty tough nut to crack here, so I'll try to keep it (as) brief (as possible): this ACBel power supply came out of a Hikvision NVR which was power-cycling. I fixed an identical one before and it was as straightforward as it gets: replaced the caps on the secondary and it was good to go - one of them was bulging at the top, making the problem even easier to spot. Job done.
THIS one though........
It had the same exact behavior and even the same bulging cap (a 2200uF one), but upon recapping it just like before, I threw it back into the NVR, powered it up and big surprise: same power-cycling as before, almost like I hadn't done anything to it !

Since time was short to get this thing back up and running again, we ordered a replacement SFX supply and called it a day, so the problem is not with the NVR. Had it not been for the less common form factor, I wouldn't have given it second thought and just binned it entirely, since there's nothing special about it and there's no reason to bother fixing ATX supplies these days, but I thought I'd be nice to get this one going as well and keep it around as a spare, as well as add to my own personal satisfaction.
With the supply on my bench, I plugged its ATX connector into one of those breakout tester boards with screw terminals to allow me to power it on without anything attached. By itself, the supply comes on just fine, the voltages appear stable (though I do not have an oscilloscope to properly confirm) and it appears to run normally. However, when I attempt to plug in a hard drive in one of the SATA connectors (which is the only thing I have on hand that represents a typical load for this kind of supply - the NVR has 4 of them, by the way), the hard drive simply refuses to spin up, despite the supply itself staying on. The voltages don't change in the slightest, at least on my DMM - a scope would probably pick up some very rapid droop which might explain the behaviour. It doesn't matter if the power supply is already on, or I switch it on at the mains switch, the drive never powers up.
However, one way I AM able to get a drive to spin up on this supply is like so: I chopped up a SATA power connector so I can hook up its wires individually: if I connect the 12v wire (yellow) AFTER the 5v wire (red) the drive spins up just fine......however, this is STILL hit and miss and doesn't always work. I tried tapping into the 12v rail before and after the "cut-off" transistor which switches off the 12v rail with the supply is in stand-by (the D-PAK transistor in the picture), but the results are too inconsistent to point me in the right direction. I even tried powering the 12v wire with the bench supply and a common GND, while the ATX supply fed the 5v rail and it worked. I even tried the opposite and powered the 5v rail externally, but it's the same inconsistency.
Yes, I DID try different junk drives I have lying around and are still functional - they all behave roughly the same.
I replaced every single cap I could find on the board, including the main one, but nothing changed.
The IC on the hot side is marked as 73k12a and although I could not find any part by this name, I came across a russian blog where another chap was asking about it, as it was apparently being used in a Philips stereo system, so I connected the dots, pulled up the service manual for that stereo and it appears to be an
OB2273. The pinout seems to agree, though I'm still not 100% sure this is it, or if it's even the culprit to begin with. If it WERE the culprit, I assume the supply would shut down entirely or not turn on at all. Instead, everything I plug into it either doesn't turn on, or power-cycles in the case of a motherboard.
Running out of ideas......the only thing I can think of is that not having the properly-sized caps on hand when I replaced them and leaving the legs exposed like that somehow causes enough noise or interference pickup to make the rail unstable enough for devices to refuse to power on....
I took some pictures of various parts of the supply......anyone faced something like this before ?