chris23892
Electrical
- Jun 21, 2013
- 4
Greetings all! First time posting and do I have a mystery I could use some insight on. I managing a Technical case where my Company has Tablets installed on forklifts. All the computer tablets have been installed and I'm starting to see Tablets come back into Service.
I take a peek at the Motherboard and each one has some pretty extreme electrical damage. We included a full system; Wire harness (fused, instructions, hardware) mounting for the Tablet and a power adapter. I've rulled out any design flaws in the system- We have been using this on forklifts for over two years.
This install base is different. The quntity of returns with these detroyed componets are growing. I know what the componets are, where it's (whatever the source of the spike) is coming in our system. I just don't know WHERE the source is coming from.
I've included the most common place on the PCB board (taken through a microscope) of a EMI protection componet. Tracing this componet and others damaged in this circuit path lead me to common grounds on the Motherboard.
Again, this in installed on a forklift. This type of damage I've before:
- Lightning
- Transient Electrical Discharge caused by static build up.
The power system is only 19 VCD to power the tablet. This damage was done very fast- The ATC 10A fuse on the power adapter is not blown (but I still see power adapters come in damaged- either the adapter is an open or a full short internally). The Motherboard, the internal fuses are OK, but I've seen some EXTREME damage to some Zener and in line bloking Diodes.
Yes, this damage was done fast with a very high enegy output.
I'm planning a trip to the site. This looks like an issue with grounding. Either the installs were not grounded correctly or maybe the lifts aren't grounded (most forklifts have chains that touch the ground to prevent static buld up.
Any suggestions on what to look for?
My game plan is to test all the grounds, make sure everything has a common ground and see if there's any potensial between grounds. I'll be using my Fluke meter with data logger and my fluke o-scope (200mHZ). Goal with the o-scope is take a peek on power and ground lines and make use of the Spectrum analyzer function (it's just running a FFT on the o-scope input) to see if there's any higher freq spikes that may be adding up. May have a harmonic that rided on the DC line causing a massive spike on the DC offset very quickly. I want to also look at the install to ensure everything is OK
What are some thoughts?
Thanks and really look forward to this disscussion!
I take a peek at the Motherboard and each one has some pretty extreme electrical damage. We included a full system; Wire harness (fused, instructions, hardware) mounting for the Tablet and a power adapter. I've rulled out any design flaws in the system- We have been using this on forklifts for over two years.
This install base is different. The quntity of returns with these detroyed componets are growing. I know what the componets are, where it's (whatever the source of the spike) is coming in our system. I just don't know WHERE the source is coming from.
I've included the most common place on the PCB board (taken through a microscope) of a EMI protection componet. Tracing this componet and others damaged in this circuit path lead me to common grounds on the Motherboard.
Again, this in installed on a forklift. This type of damage I've before:
- Lightning
- Transient Electrical Discharge caused by static build up.
The power system is only 19 VCD to power the tablet. This damage was done very fast- The ATC 10A fuse on the power adapter is not blown (but I still see power adapters come in damaged- either the adapter is an open or a full short internally). The Motherboard, the internal fuses are OK, but I've seen some EXTREME damage to some Zener and in line bloking Diodes.
Yes, this damage was done fast with a very high enegy output.
I'm planning a trip to the site. This looks like an issue with grounding. Either the installs were not grounded correctly or maybe the lifts aren't grounded (most forklifts have chains that touch the ground to prevent static buld up.
Any suggestions on what to look for?
My game plan is to test all the grounds, make sure everything has a common ground and see if there's any potensial between grounds. I'll be using my Fluke meter with data logger and my fluke o-scope (200mHZ). Goal with the o-scope is take a peek on power and ground lines and make use of the Spectrum analyzer function (it's just running a FFT on the o-scope input) to see if there's any higher freq spikes that may be adding up. May have a harmonic that rided on the DC line causing a massive spike on the DC offset very quickly. I want to also look at the install to ensure everything is OK
What are some thoughts?
Thanks and really look forward to this disscussion!