- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
156 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
156 lines
9.8 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 2284
|
|
Title: HPR2284: Resurrecting a dead ethernet switch
|
|
Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2284/hpr2284.mp3
|
|
Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:52:54
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
This in HPR episode 2,284 entitled, re-selecting an Ethernet switch.
|
|
It is hosted by MiWid and in about 15 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
|
|
The summary is, replacing a failing capacitor in the power supply of an Ethernet switch to make it work again.
|
|
This episode of HPR is brought to you by an honesthost.com.
|
|
Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code, HPR15, that's HPR15.
|
|
Better web hosting that's honest and fair at an honesthost.com.
|
|
Hello, heck of a big radio, this is Murphy on Micro if you prefer.
|
|
Today's episode will be one of the kind I make you listen while I do stuff.
|
|
I personally like those and I think it's, if advised, a very cheap way to get a show done.
|
|
A bit more than four years ago, I bought two units of an 8-port gigabit Ethernet switch
|
|
to be used one at my place and one at my parent's house as the main switches for the computer networks there.
|
|
The units did their job until a while ago, the one at my place went toes up.
|
|
I simply hooked up an old backup switch and did not think much about it any further.
|
|
Until about two weeks ago, I got a call from my brother who's with my parents and he said,
|
|
well, things are about half an hour I can't get to the internet.
|
|
So the next thing I tried was to connect from the outside, which worked fine,
|
|
but I could not get to his computer and the only thing in between was that set switch.
|
|
So the point of failure was very obvious.
|
|
With my help on the phone, my brother was able to hook up a backup solution
|
|
to bring the family back online and I was left with two broken switches.
|
|
At this point I was getting curious. Two switches of the same kind broken in
|
|
roughly the same time I had my one here, so let's have a look inside, it can't hurt.
|
|
I opened mine up, found the fault, which was a broken capacitor in the power supply,
|
|
replaced it, and it works like a charm again.
|
|
End of episode.
|
|
Well, not quite. Fixing the first unit would have been a great show for HPR,
|
|
but I just missed this opportunity.
|
|
Luckily, I got a second chance.
|
|
I'm now at my parents' house sitting in front of the second unit and hoping it's the same
|
|
disease to be cured with the same measures.
|
|
And I thought I would give it a go to record the show for HECA Public Radio on this one.
|
|
So I verified the device is not working and I will start unscrewing the housing.
|
|
It's a metal housing, solid, sturdy, that's one of the reasons why I like those, those switches.
|
|
I already removed three of the five screws and I will undo the next two.
|
|
I unscrewed all the screws.
|
|
So the lid is open.
|
|
What I can see, there are two printed circuit boards in the housing.
|
|
One smaller one is the switch power supply with the main power source.
|
|
And the big green PCB with all the electronics for the Ethernet switch stuff.
|
|
So I can power it up just once again.
|
|
And I see the power LED is blinking.
|
|
And if you listen carefully, you can see some periodic buzzing sound.
|
|
Let me see if I can record this.
|
|
So it sounds like there is some startup in the power supply and then
|
|
something goes wrong and the power LED goes off again and
|
|
when it tries it again and again and again and it's blinking,
|
|
blinking away, not getting booted at all.
|
|
I turned it off again.
|
|
So let's have a look with a multimeter at the voltage of the power supply.
|
|
I know from the other device it's a 3.3 volt power supply and I already found the points
|
|
which connect the meter on the green board just shortly after the on board power connector
|
|
where the power supply is plugged in and then there's an additional buffer capacitor
|
|
and some filtered choke.
|
|
And after those we have some wire hooks where we can easily connect our meters.
|
|
Turning it on again and I see on the voltmeter voltage jumping up and down between zero and
|
|
two point something's re-ish volts.
|
|
So it's obvious it's unstable and we can try to have a look at this voltage with the oscilloscope.
|
|
Turn it off again.
|
|
I will hook it up at the same point where I had the voltmeter and I will have a picture of this
|
|
in the show notes.
|
|
So let's try it on again.
|
|
Still blinking away.
|
|
And I see a changing voltage on the oscilloscope.
|
|
Let's slow down the trace and it just trigger to catch the rising voltage.
|
|
So what I can see on the scope here is now the voltage starts to rise.
|
|
Slide the above the 3.3 volts point.
|
|
Then it's stable therefore about 300 milliseconds and then it starts dropping almost down to zero.
|
|
And this repeats at the same rate as the blinking of the LED.
|
|
I managed to take a picture of the screen of the scope so you can see the
|
|
the fall of the voltage right there.
|
|
We have verified the voltage is unstable.
|
|
It's just collapsing when the load is switched on when the computer
|
|
in there tries to boot.
|
|
And as you will see on the picture the output capacitor on the power supply is
|
|
bulging the housing of the final electrolytic capacitor is bulging on the top
|
|
which is already an indication that there's something wrong with this capacitor.
|
|
So I will now remove the power supply PCB from the whole housing, unplugging the
|
|
connector to the other board.
|
|
And now unscrewing the mounting screws of the power supply PCB.
|
|
One screw.
|
|
Now the screw at the socket and then the same in the main time I will power up the soldering
|
|
irons because I know it will be soldering this one capacitor.
|
|
So now I have the PCB of the power supply in my hands and at the edge of the board
|
|
close to the output there is this one electrolytic capacitor.
|
|
Let's see if the soldering iron is already hot.
|
|
Okay so now I have to unsolder two pins of this capacitor and one way to do it is to just
|
|
play a little bit additional solder to have flux with it.
|
|
And then I will try to use the solder suction pump to remove the solder of those two
|
|
contacts. So I make sure the whole solder block is well molten and then I go with the suction pump
|
|
and just pull it away.
|
|
Especially with if you have single-sided PCBs with only one side of copper and no copper
|
|
plating in the holes like you have on multi-layered digital boards and so on.
|
|
Using the solder suction pump is a very good way and it normally works very well.
|
|
Then remove all this solder and now this let's heat it up again.
|
|
Yeah now this blocks better.
|
|
And if the suction pump worked you can see basically the wire of the component
|
|
in the middle of a hole and the area around it is already free so it's moving freely.
|
|
Just sticking to some glue on the upside of the PCB so a little bit more force
|
|
and now I have the capacitor in my hand.
|
|
This multimeter has the possibility to measure capacity.
|
|
The capacitor is 2,200 microfarad,
|
|
10 volt. The meter can only do 20 microfarad, not 2,200 but from the experience I had with my
|
|
other unit. I think it will be enough to test the capacitor.
|
|
Let's see, should switch to capacity measurement first.
|
|
No, it's still enough to get an over-range so the capacitor has still more than 20 microfarads,
|
|
which is what you should expect from a device rated to 2,200 microfarads.
|
|
I do not have the same size of component.
|
|
I have 2,200 microfarads, 25 volts, not 10 volts. It's more than double the size of the
|
|
original component. But there's plenty of room in the housing beside the power supply boards
|
|
so I will just mount it, bend over, lying, lying sideways, which should work fine.
|
|
So I'm bending the pin of the capacitor to fit in the holes of the
|
|
board where the original component was.
|
|
Bending a little bit more. So I have the two wires sticking out of the PCB
|
|
on the solder side and I just have to apply new solder to the system.
|
|
So clipping off the excessive ends.
|
|
And then I would expect the thing to work again.
|
|
So I'm optimistic and will mount the board right back into its place.
|
|
First the screws at the power cable connector.
|
|
Filling with the screws.
|
|
One and the last one, which also stick around connection for the power supply
|
|
to the housing to the ground lead of the mains cable.
|
|
Tightening the nuts.
|
|
So then replacing the plug on the main board from the power supply
|
|
looks nice. Then replace the main mains cable and just turn it on and see what happens.
|
|
And immediately power supply lights up, power LED lights up, steady and stable,
|
|
and the rest of the LEDs perform normal blinking like for a regular boot of the device.
|
|
Looks nice. Let's take the multimeter and connect it again to see if the voltage is.
|
|
So the voltmeter says it's 3.29 volts. You can then have another look with the scope.
|
|
Just to verify that things are fine again.
|
|
Which I have no doubt. I don't know.
|
|
So it's one steady trace at a 3.3 volt line. No visible hum on the signal.
|
|
The device booted nicely. I think it's done. I have to close the housing, screw it up again,
|
|
and then I'm left for the second. Perfectly working even at switch.
|
|
So this leaves me with a warm, fuzzy feeling being very satisfied.
|
|
Not for just getting this switch working again because I was pretty, pretty confident that
|
|
it was the same problem which could be fixed easily.
|
|
But I'm much, much more proud of now having a show for Hacker Public Radio recorded.
|
|
And to have gotten this done, finally, finally.
|
|
If you listen till now, hope you enjoyed the show. Have fun. See you next time. Bye.
|
|
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio dot org.
|
|
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
|
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
|
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out
|
|
how easy it really is. Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the
|
|
infonomicum computer club. And it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
|
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the
|
|
website or record a follow-up episode yourself. Unless otherwise status, today's show is released
|
|
under Creative Commons, Attribution, ShareLite, 3.0 license.
|