I run a temp monitor and the lows are abot 40 C and the highs maybe 53. Not being pushed much; at least if I can trust the monitor software. ;-)

Even tho it is supposed to be fanless I run a small fan; not sure it does  much good.

Will have a look at the caps this morning. I do have an identical board I can sub.

Dave

On 2/1/20 4:40 AM, Nicklas Karlsson wrote:
Had problem with HP server, it sometimes turned off, I could hear the fan speed 
increase then it worked so for some reason I decided to remove cooling fin, 
clearad ir, added new paste. Then it worked much better, could hear it on the 
fan and that was a real suprise. If it happaned once I guess it could happen 
for others to, especially if old computers is used.


Nearly all manufacturers of electronics from the 1990's into the early 21st 
century ended up getting at least some of those faulty capacitors, such was the 
massive quantity of counterfeits made with the bad electrolyte formula. Apple 
seemed to have been especially hard hit.
     On Friday, January 31, 2020, 8:54:51 PM MST, dave engvall 
<dengv...@charter.net> wrote:
Certainly an idea to check out. Never occurred to me but the I suppose
Intel  could be victim of that kinda of fraud as easily as other
vendors. It is on tomorrows list of things to do. Tnx

Dave

On 1/31/20 7:16 PM, Gregg Eshelman via Emc-users wrote:
Have you checked the board for leaking capacitors? Usually the pressure relief 
cuts on top of the cans split open.
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