Author Topic: Help identifying blown IC  (Read 663 times)

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Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Help identifying blown IC
« on: September 13, 2024, 04:34:51 pm »
Hello!
I have circuit board from garage door opener motor. That board is providing power when the opener is in standby mode. So the garage door opener works but when it goes to standby after 90 sec it dies. I have identified that one chip is broken and on the chip are markings SC…….. The IC should help to create the standby voltage. I did identify capacitor negative side C4. The output from here should be 12v, on the mainboard is marking 12v at VCC pin.
I also did measure voltage on C4 and it was very high about 300v. I will measure later again.

It seems that it is some kind DC-DC voltage converter.
 

Online coromonadalix

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #1 on: September 13, 2024, 04:48:22 pm »
check LNK62XDG  LNK304DN-TL    ....  datasheet  ....
TNY278GN



but yours seems  SC ....   ???    Semtec SC2608   SC1104B  ....

you have to search  SO-8C  packages
« Last Edit: September 13, 2024, 05:00:55 pm by coromonadalix »
 
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Online fzabkar

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #2 on: September 13, 2024, 06:05:27 pm »
The logo appears to belong to Power Integrations.

https://www.power.com/products/ac-dc-conversion
 

Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #3 on: September 13, 2024, 06:54:01 pm »
check LNK62XDG  LNK304DN-TL    ....  datasheet  ....
TNY278GN



but yours seems  SC ....   ???    Semtec SC2608   SC1104B  ....

you have to search  SO-8C  packages
TNY278GN schematic in datasheet seems very very similar, only some few details seem different.
The board has name: et-evopwb-r

I'll be looking other datasheets.
 
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Online coromonadalix

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Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #5 on: September 14, 2024, 05:24:39 am »
The logo appears to belong to Power Integrations.

https://www.power.com/products/ac-dc-conversion

that would maybe  LinkSwitch-TN2Q  ???
https://www.power.com/sites/default/files/documents/rdr-707q_9pt75w_automotive_non-isolated_buck_linkswitch-tn2q.pdf
The example circuit seems very different from the pcb I have got.
I made bigger picture with microscope.
 

Offline Harry_22

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #6 on: September 14, 2024, 07:24:17 am »
a little closer...
 
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Online xavier60

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #7 on: September 14, 2024, 07:27:28 am »
There used to be parts beginning with "SC", https://www.lcsc.com/datasheet/lcsc_datasheet_2308151758_POWER-INTEGRATIONS-SC1145DG-TL_C7527508.pdf
I can't confirm from the photos that the FB pin is fed from a divider from the transformer winding.
HP 54645A dso, Fluke 87V dmm,  Agilent U8002A psu,  FY6600 function gen,  Brymen BM857S, HAKKO FM-204, New! HAKKO FX-971.
 

Offline Harry_22

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #8 on: September 14, 2024, 07:45:53 am »
very close
 
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Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #9 on: September 14, 2024, 11:57:31 am »
I did some pictures with microscope and stiched together.
 

Online xavier60

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #10 on: September 14, 2024, 12:38:02 pm »
I'm assuming the 2nd pin down on the transformer connects to R8 and R13, so something from the LNK623-626
LinkSwitch-CV Family should be suitable.
My main experience is having replaced hundreds of blown LNK624DG on washer controller boards for the last 10 years. I soon discovered that using the LNK626DG as a replacement greatly improved reliability.
The higher numbered variants have higher peak current so there is some risk of transformer saturation but never occurred in my situation.
Also, a small percentage of transformers get damaged by the high current surge during the blow-up. I can pick them by checking primary resistance as it is already known to me.
HP 54645A dso, Fluke 87V dmm,  Agilent U8002A psu,  FY6600 function gen,  Brymen BM857S, HAKKO FM-204, New! HAKKO FX-971.
 
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Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #11 on: September 14, 2024, 04:25:21 pm »
I'm assuming the 2nd pin down on the transformer connects to R8 and R13, so something from the LNK623-626
LinkSwitch-CV Family should be suitable.
My main experience is having replaced hundreds of blown LNK624DG on washer controller boards for the last 10 years. I soon discovered that using the LNK626DG as a replacement greatly improved reliability.
The higher numbered variants have higher peak current so there is some risk of transformer saturation but never occurred in my situation.
Also, a small percentage of transformers get damaged by the high current surge during the blow-up. I can pick them by checking primary resistance as it is already known to me.
Thanks!
I ordered LNK626 and estimated time of arrival is 19.09.2024. When I receive it I will report.
 

Offline Kaar3lTopic starter

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Re: Help identifying blown IC
« Reply #12 on: September 19, 2024, 11:51:26 am »
I'm assuming the 2nd pin down on the transformer connects to R8 and R13, so something from the LNK623-626
LinkSwitch-CV Family should be suitable.
My main experience is having replaced hundreds of blown LNK624DG on washer controller boards for the last 10 years. I soon discovered that using the LNK626DG as a replacement greatly improved reliability.
The higher numbered variants have higher peak current so there is some risk of transformer saturation but never occurred in my situation.
Also, a small percentage of transformers get damaged by the high current surge during the blow-up. I can pick them by checking primary resistance as it is already known to me.
Thank you!
Soldered new chip in place and checked with multimeter and it gave 12v DC.
The faulty chip the garage door opener started maybe 1 in 10 times. Now I have tested it and it started 10/10 times so it fixed the opener.
 :clap: :clap:
 
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