Agree with yah.Buy a new charger. You risk destroying your battery with this thing. Unless you have a deep knowledge of electronic troubleshooting, there's no chance of fixing the thing. Even if you did, the failed part may not be available to you. It might even be custom. And, without a proper schematic, which is no doubt unavailable, you wouldn't even know the value of the failed part.
With another look at the OP photo it is coincidental that it died 5-years to the day from the date printed on the board 09/27/2016. Again, I see the corrosion a
I m curious and like to learn from failures.@retiredNH is correct. There is also corrosion for example at C12. Do not mess with it. If you were a Navy electronics expert trapped in a submarine and repairing it were the only way the sub could surface, that would be different! In the charging process. 1) Turn off the battery. 2) Plug the new charger into the battery. 3) The final step is to plug the charger into the wall. This final step puts any spark at the wall as alternating current, away from your battery.
C12 is often used as the self destruct capacitor set to discharge the day after the warranty endsWith another look at the OP photo it is coincidental that it died 5-years to the day from the date printed on the board 09/27/2016. Again, I see the corrosion at C12. Was it in a damp tropical beach bag?
It probably isn't a resistor failure. These are switching supplies. Higher voltage could be due to any number of reasons. Without a schematic, it's shooting in the dark to guess what the problem is.I m curious n like to learn from failure.
I m curious and like to learn from failures.
Tough the corrosion you mentioned in c12, this charger is still energized; just it is jumping to higher voltage output 68v instead of its rated voltage of 54.6 vdc. It's like a resistance failure here.
The physical damage is imminent is in the area of R5.
My solution has been to keep a couple of cheap chargers as backups. Sorry I'm repeating but but repairing a cheap charger just isn't cost effective.it's shooting in the dark