Resistor/Capacitor broke off, anyone knows if it matters?
Resistor/Capacitor broke off, anyone knows if it matters?
Looks like a mosfet got broken. I am no electro-ologist, but it is probably going to have weird voltages wherever that mosfet serves. Might be okay for a while or maybe not.
If I wanted to save the board, I’d order a replacement from Digikey or elsewhere. Just ID one next to it and order it up. Have a finer tip on the soldering iron and Bob’s your uncle!
Looks like maybe the copper pad came off for one of the contacts.
In that case a resolder might be a pain, and require some extra work to expose more of the trace.
K72s are transistors typically used in power management. I would guess that when it was intact, it controlled power for either the PCIe slots to the right, or the USB-C port above it.
If the affected port isn’t in use, it probably won’t cause any issues.
That would be my assumption.
You don’t see much redundancy in motherboards, so OP is off in that regard.
Rather, a lot of parts are non-critical because not every single one is needed to begin with. Unless you actually populate every single connector and port on a motherboard, a lot of it is doing nothing.
From what I can tell, there’s a bunch of similar components all the way up, so I’d think there’s redundancy, so I guess it’s not that important.
This is definitely not a good way of thinking about electronics. Your motherboard might be fine but assuming identical components are for redundancy is a mistake!
Yeah, I think it’s the onboard audio. Physical gap to prevent picking up all the noise from the pcie slots.
I’d just check for any components in that area while after it’s running to make sure nothing is getting to hot. If you don’t want to buy a new mb and want to be maybe safer disable onboard audio in the bios. Then use your GPU, find a cheap sound card, or use usb audio.
Something is damaged, but sometimes it doesn’t effect how your using it.
Yeah, I think it’s the onboard audio. Physical gap to prevent picking up all the noise from the pcie slots.
I’d just check for any components in that area while after it’s running to make sure nothing is getting to hot. If you don’t want to buy a new mb and want to be maybe safer disable onboard audio in the bios. Then use your GPU, find a cheap sound card, or use usb audio.
Something is damaged, but sometimes it doesn’t effect how your using it.