I had watched a lot of videos on mosfets and this is absolutely the best instruction on testing them. Thank you for sharing them. Got a new sub right here.
This is awesome! Can you do more of these vids? Until your videos came, I didn't even think it was worth it repairing graphics cards. A series for beginners (how to read schematics, what are gates, etc) would be great! Thank you. Hopefully you get more subscribers.
Thanks for the video ,i have an important question ,so if i want to replace a faulty cpu mosfet and i dont have one ,can i connect two single normal mosfet together with wire and use them as a dual mosfet for replacement ?
is the mosfet you test first working properly? I have couple of mosfets from donor card i wanted to use as replacement for another gpu, but the resistance on first channel and second channel is different like on the first one you test, the second mosfet you're testing shows similar resistance on both channels. I worry that if i slap them in they'll just blow up on start @northwestrepair
Yes, you are right. Most modern video cards using N-channel mosfets and this video was not just a general guide on how to test an element, its rather very specific to the subject.
yes. in diode mode, meter is sending 2v across the leads and measures how low it drops. Voltage drop basically is what you see here. If drop is 0, resistance is low. Continuity. If drop is high or out of range, resistance is high. Some or no continuity.
I have a gtx 1080 Aero from MSI and one of the mosfets was bolwn. Since I dont have the the same one for replacmet but have a similar from diferent MSI card gtx 1070 gaming x. The mosfet in question is 4C85N and the one I want to repalce with is 4C86N, they have same pin leyout an similar datasheet. My question is it safe to use that one for replacment or wait 1 to 2 month for replacment ?
I had watched a lot of videos on mosfets and this is absolutely the best instruction on testing them. Thank you for sharing them. Got a new sub right here.
I had no idea the transistor maintained its state after switching. I thought the input had to be sustained to keep it in that state. Amazing stuff.
Not transistors, just mosfets because of the metal oxide that acts like a capacitor
This is awesome! Can you do more of these vids? Until your videos came, I didn't even think it was worth it repairing graphics cards. A series for beginners (how to read schematics, what are gates, etc) would be great! Thank you. Hopefully you get more subscribers.
Much appreciate the short intro; nothing annoys me more than those long, loud intro's. Thanks for this content.
I agree
wonderful lesson sensei
Thanks for the video ,i have an important question ,so if i want to replace a faulty cpu mosfet and i dont have one ,can i connect two single normal mosfet together with wire and use them as a dual mosfet for replacement ?
thank u for the information ....it will help me a lot 🙂
Thank for the demonstration
Can u add checking drmos? I dont know if im right what is called, the one with the internal driver and mosfet combined i think.
Awesome video
is the mosfet you test first working properly? I have couple of mosfets from donor card i wanted to use as replacement for another gpu, but the resistance on first channel and second channel is different like on the first one you test, the second mosfet you're testing shows similar resistance on both channels. I worry that if i slap them in they'll just blow up on start @northwestrepair
Thnanks for the class.
Nice technic, though you always have to know the type of MOSFET you're trying to measure i.e P-channel or N-channel mosfet. Thanks for the knowledge
Yes, you are right. Most modern video cards using N-channel mosfets and this video was not just a general guide on how to test an element, its rather very specific to the subject.
Great work
Thanks
How to check Sic 632 mosfet working or not😢
I dont get how do you "open" and "close". Does multimeter provide some sort of voltage?
yes.
in diode mode, meter is sending 2v across the leads and measures how low it drops.
Voltage drop basically is what you see here.
If drop is 0, resistance is low. Continuity.
If drop is high or out of range, resistance is high. Some or no continuity.
Thanks!
thanks. what issues do you usually encounter with a bad mosfets?
shorted out or stuck open. Usually short.
MOST-FE ❤ Most faith
I believe this is true only for a n channel mosfet?
I have a gtx 1080 Aero from MSI and one of the mosfets was bolwn. Since I dont have the the same one for replacmet but have a similar from diferent MSI card gtx 1070 gaming x. The mosfet in question is 4C85N and the one I want to repalce with is 4C86N, they have same pin leyout an similar datasheet. My question is it safe to use that one for replacment or wait 1 to 2 month for replacment ?
Yes
Same or higher ratings, same pinout, should be good.
@@northwestrepair thx Your videos a breath of fresh air for electronic gpu repairment, both educatial and fun to watch. keep a good content
Good work
Thank you so much 😀
cool!
Where you get this diagram... Of source and drain..
Google the number on your part and search the datasheet
@hectorpascale1013 but bro. They are unabliable
For the algo!!!
wow.
Thanks!