I have a failed network switch (Netgear4 port POE FWIW) that I fancy attempting to repair. I’ve gone to the trouble of disassembling the miscreant device and have located a component on the board with signs of catastrophic failure - charred or burnt circuit board at one end. The component is labelled as “FB2” on the circuit board and is a grey cylinder.
With luck the link will take you to a picture of the board
Question: What would I need to order to attempt a replacement?
ah. I hoped it was the grey thing as it looks to me broken. I don’t think it is a diode as there doesn’t appear to have any polarity indicators on it. I’ll look more closely at the capacitors to see if there are any indications of failure. Thanks!
Is the cost of replacing the switch so prohibitive that you feel the need to repair it instead? I ask because there is a reason that happened in the first place, and there may be more damage that you can’t see.
Just about to point that out. Not sure what is on the board there by C3, might be fluid that leaked out of another cap. Between my eyes and the resolution can’t tell if it’s anything.
Electrolytic capacitor leakage. No easy way to be sure where the corrosion has got to.
In my limited hobbyist experience, this is the point where I start salvaging usable components from the non-damaged portions of the PCB and dispose of the rest.
Thanks @gnoitall and everyone else too. Seems likely I’ll give up on my ill-thought-out plan to repair this widget. Yes, you’re right, I am a congenital quitter.
It would be an interesting experiment, something to help build your knowledge of electronics, but very likely produce no other useful results. So maybe not worth any more effort, but no one would blame you for removing the likely affected components, re-evaluating your decision, then still deciding it wasn’t worth the effort, yet still tossing the board in with the others you’ve collected in the same manner and in less time than you think pulling it out and marveling how the modern electronics in just a few years have reduced that switch to something the size of a Tic-Tac.