Nvidia chip capacitors

dehydrated_lemur

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I was just checking out things around the Nvidia chip. I noticed a lot of the capacitors have continuity on each side and are shorted to ground. I thought that was weird. Is this normal? Around sp1 and sp2.

When I check continuity on sp1 and sp2 my meter beeps.
8cc1b0122624c90a73345efe0f56c038.jpg
 
Last edited by dehydrated_lemur,
I was just checking out things around the Nvidia chip. I noticed a lot of the capacitors have continuity on each side and are shorted to ground. I thought that was weird. Is this normal? Around sp1 and sp2.

When I check continuity on sp1 and sp2 my meter beeps.
8cc1b0122624c90a73345efe0f56c038.jpg

What brought you to measuring continuity all of a sudden? Was the Switch misbehaving or were you doing something else that would warrant concern?

Clean up the paste on the caps with IPA and take a closer pic please...under a scope if you can.
 
Thank you but im not trying to test the capacitor. I was just worried I ruined something by opening this up because both ends of the capacitors go to ground.
 
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The switch is not misbehaving. I was just replacing the thermal paste and decided to to start probing things. My switch works fine I just thought it was weird that sp1 and sp2 are grounded. A few of the other caps here also beep when I touch both sides of them and are grounded

It doesn't make sense why capacitors would run to ground on both sides of them.

I'm sorry I don't have a microscope
94e7f39c8dcd6612b2b1a25fe6ab8444.jpg

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Hmmm. Typically an array of components flaking out would manifest itself in a malfunction of some sorts.

Here’s a thread that goes into more detail:

https://gbatemp.net/threads/capacitors-grounded-on-both-sides.550799/

…but yeah, hard to tell from this vantage point and since you weren’t soldering anything in the area I’d say something else in the circuit is giving you that apparent reading and it’s operating correctly.
 
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Hmmm. Typically an array of components flaking out would manifest itself in a malfunction of some sorts.

Here’s a thread that goes into more detail:

https://gbatemp.net/threads/capacitors-grounded-on-both-sides.550799/

…but yeah, hard to tell from this vantage point and since you weren’t soldering anything in the area I’d say something else in the circuit is giving you that apparent reading and it’s operating correctly.
So you think it might just be a "false" reading?
 
seems people (here?!?!) have even knocked them off and their system still works with the flex cable in place…may have to try this one day…for science.
Those caps are there for stabilizing the voltage peaks inside the CPU.
If you don't fully stress out the cpu then you might get away with it.
There are also other capacitors next to the CPU which can remove the noise on the power lines.
 
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Those caps are there for stabilizing the voltage peaks inside the CPU.
If you don't fully stress out the cpu then you might get away with it.
There are also other capacitors next to the CPU which can remove the noise on the power lines.
That makes a heck of a lot more sense. Thank you!
 
so, it's okay to see the three capacitors near sp1 have continuity? Coz I'm running into that at the moment and am very scared of accidentally bricking the cpu.
 
the threshold for 'continuity' on your multimeter is apparently under the resistance value measured on the positive side to gnd
 
Yeah, also, sp1 (the left horizontal cap, I assume) has a 16ohm resistance across it as well. is that normal?
 

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