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  1. #1


    Quote Originally Posted by Victor Coleiro View Post
    Suprised the Ouya didn't have a fuse that blew first like with a GBA.
    More surprised about some guys that thinks that 12 vdc is the same tan 12 vac. Engineers can´t protect devices against stupidity.

  2. #2


    Quote Originally Posted by Kuesco View Post
    some guys that thinks that 12 vdc is the same tan 12 vac.
    Yes, that's how it went...

    __________________________________________________
    EDIT:

    This is the email I got from the official support:

    S**** O***** replied:

    Hello R****,

    We do apologize for the delay in response unfortunately we do not have access to that information, we do apologize for the inconvenience.
    Best,

    -S***
    OUYA Support

  3. #3


    They didn't have SMD components, but I tried it with an other capacitor without success. The Ouya doesn't boot up any more at all, so I guess I will be giving up. If the official support would still give an answer, I'll share it in this topic.

    Thank you all for the interest and help.

  4. #4


    Quote Originally Posted by saito View Post
    They didn't have SMD components, but I tried it with an other capacitor without success. The Ouya doesn't boot up any more at all, so I guess I will be giving up. If the official support would still give an answer, I'll share it in this topic.

    Thank you all for the interest and help.
    Sorry it didn't work out.

    You tried with another capacitor? Was it an electrolytic? Some of the eletrolytic capacitors have a higher ESR then polymers and ceramics. Which could add more noise into your power circuit. And yeah, SMD capacitors you typically have to get from Chinese vendors as your big named houses like digikey or mouser will only sell them to you in packs of 50.

  5. #5


    Quote Originally Posted by sconfig View Post
    Sorry it didn't work out.

    You tried with another capacitor? Was it an electrolytic? Some of the eletrolytic capacitors have a higher ESR then polymers and ceramics. Which could add more noise into your power circuit. And yeah, SMD capacitors you typically have to get from Chinese vendors as your big named houses like digikey or mouser will only sell them to you in packs of 50.
    If it was an electrolytic he could of got the polarity wrong.
    This would def. keep the rest of the board from getting power.

    Saito,
    try reversing the capacitor.

    Also, I wouldn't be too hard on OUYA support.
    There are not many companies out there that would give out that info.
    In OUYA's case i'm guessing the boards in these are NVIDIA T3 reference boards so OUYA inc. might not even know what the components are themselves.

  6. #6


    Quote Originally Posted by Nitrogen_Widget View Post
    If it was an electrolytic he could of got the polarity wrong.
    This would def. keep the rest of the board from getting power.

    Saito,
    try reversing the capacitor.

    Also, I wouldn't be too hard on OUYA support.
    There are not many companies out there that would give out that info.
    In OUYA's case i'm guessing the boards in these are NVIDIA T3 reference boards so OUYA inc. might not even know what the components are themselves.
    I should warn people that reversing an electrolytic cap since it is polarized can produce hazardous results such as explosion. You do have to worry about polarity where with ceramics you don't since they are used for filtering. If you have to use a electrolytic as a substitution and you understand that you are altering the ripple and frequency since you may not have an oscilloscope to see the changes then the negative on an electrolytic will go to your ground.

    http://bhushantimilsina.blogspot.com...for-doing.html - if you would like to know more.

  7. #7


    Yes, it was an electrolytic capacitor.

  8. #8


    If its a filter you could just try bridging the connection...what do you have to loose?

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