This is for the 7.5v 2A version - M5140 (APS-20U) & M5651 (APS-20U) (and possibly others)
Using a flat head screwdriver, place it between the output cable and the top case. Press in hard till you hear cracking then rock it back and forth a bit. You shouldn't hit any components but it does take quite a bit of force to open.
Once opened there is one Philips screw near on the PCB near the plug end. It's a bit tricky to see. Unscrew and lift that side out first to slip the PCB out.
Check the fuse while you're in here with a multi meter to ensure it is not blown.
Pay attention to the size of the capacitors, the spacing is limited in the brick.
RIFA - 0.22uf - 250v
C108 - 82uf 400v
C209 - 2200uf 16v
C211 - 470uf 16v
C111- 47uf 50v (hard to get a good angle on it to read)
I did not recap this one as it is working fine.
Check the traces on the back. Clean any corrosion off and check the traces are good. You may need to add bodge wires if any are corroded so much they no longer create a connection.
Other Resources
Opening the Adapter
Using a flat head screwdriver, place it between the output cable and the top case. Press in hard till you hear cracking then rock it back and forth a bit. You shouldn't hit any components but it does take quite a bit of force to open.
Once opened there is one Philips screw near on the PCB near the plug end. It's a bit tricky to see. Unscrew and lift that side out first to slip the PCB out.
What to check
Fuse
Check the fuse while you're in here with a multi meter to ensure it is not blown.
Capacitors - M5140 (APS-20U) & M5651 (APS-20U)
Pay attention to the size of the capacitors, the spacing is limited in the brick.
Main Board
Daughter Board
- C151 35v 33uF (orig 6.4x8, but only 5x11 available)
- C252 50v 1uF (~2mm taller than orig, should fit)
Capacitors - M5652 (APS-46U)
RIFA - 0.22uf - 250v
C108 - 82uf 400v
C209 - 2200uf 16v
C211 - 470uf 16v
C111- 47uf 50v (hard to get a good angle on it to read)
I did not recap this one as it is working fine.
Corroded traces on back side
Check the traces on the back. Clean any corrosion off and check the traces are good. You may need to add bodge wires if any are corroded so much they no longer create a connection.
Other Resources
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