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Nintendo Entertainment System Capacitor Replacement Guide

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Revision as of 14:48, 4 May 2025 by Josh (talk | contribs) (Automated update by bot)

Replacing the electrolytic capacitors in a Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) restores power stability, reduces video/audio glitches, and can resolve random resets or startup failures. The NES uses robust Japanese capacitors, but after 35+ years, original parts are often dried out or leaky, especially in high-heat areas near the voltage regulator and RF modulator.

๐Ÿ” Visual Inspection & Failure Signs

  • Bulging or leaking cans โ€“ especially C6 (main filter) and C22 (audio/video decoupling).
  • Corrosion or brown residue โ€“ at the base of capacitors, often near the power supply section.
  • Vertical lines or flicker on video โ€“ commonly linked to failing C10 or C12.
  • Audio hum or distortion โ€“ dried-out C22 or C24 can inject noise into the audio path.
  • Random resets or failure to power on โ€“ C6 or C7 (power rail filters) with high ESR.

If any capacitor shows visible failure, itโ€™s best practice to replace all electrolytic capacitors on the mainboard.

๐Ÿ“‹ NES Mainboard Capacitor List

The NES mainboard (NES-CPU-xx) uses through-hole aluminium electrolytics. Always verify values against your boardโ€™s silkscreen, as minor revisions exist.

๐Ÿ–ฅ๏ธ NES-CPU-05/07/09 Mainboard

NES Electrolytic Capacitors
Board Ref Capacitance Voltage Purpose / Rail
C6 1 000 ยตF 16 V Main +5 V input filter (from AC adapter)
C7 220 ยตF 16 V +5 V regulator output smoothing
C10 47 ยตF 16 V PPU +5 V decoupling (video stability)
C12 10 ยตF 16 V CPU +5 V decoupling
C22 10 ยตF 16 V Audio output DC blocking
C24 1 ยตF 50 V Audio path coupling (to RF modulator)
C25 100 ยตF 16 V RF modulator supply filter

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Additional Notes

  • Some revisions may use slightly different values for C7 or C25 (e.g., 330 ยตF or 220 ยตF). Always match or slightly exceed voltage ratings.
  • Ceramic and tantalum capacitors (e.g., C11, C13) rarely fail and do not need routine replacement.
  • If your NES has severe corrosion or liquid damage, inspect for lifted pads or broken traces before recapping.

๐Ÿงฐ Replacement Tips

  • Use 105ยฐC rated capacitors for maximum longevity.
  • Observe polarity: the long lead is positive, and the negative stripe on the body must match the boardโ€™s marking.
  • Desolder one capacitor at a time to avoid confusion.
  • Clean any leaked electrolyte with isopropyl alcohol before installing new parts.
  • After recapping, test the NES with a known-good power supply and game cartridge.

๐Ÿ“š References

๐Ÿ“ See Also