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Atari ST Book Capacitor Replacement Guide

From RetroTechCollection

This article provides a capacitor replacement (recapping) guide for the Atari ST Book notebook computer. The ST Book uses predominantly SMD (surface-mount) electrolytic capacitors due to its ultra-thin form factor. Recapping requires SMD soldering skills and appropriate tools.

Given the extreme rarity of the ST Book (estimated 1,000–1,200 units produced), exercise particular care during any board-level work. Photograph and document everything before beginning.

When to recap

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Recapping is recommended when any of the following are observed:

  • Instability, crashes, or failure to boot
  • Audio distortion or no audio output
  • Display issues not attributable to the LCD panel itself
  • Visible electrolyte leakage or capacitor bulging (inspect under magnification — SMD caps are small)
  • The machine is approaching or exceeding 30 years of age (preventive maintenance)
  • Battery life significantly reduced from expected values

Capacitor inspection

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SMD electrolytic capacitors on the ST Book require magnification to inspect:

  • Bulging — The aluminium can may show a slightly domed top. Compare suspect caps to known-good ones visually.
  • Electrolyte leakage — Brown or amber-coloured residue around the base of the capacitor or on the PCB beneath it. May appear as a dark stain.
  • Corrosion — Green or white deposits on capacitor leads or nearby traces.
  • Lifted pads — If electrolyte has attacked the solder, the capacitor may have loosened from its pads.

Tools and materials

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  • Temperature-controlled soldering station with fine tip (conical or chisel, 1–2 mm)
  • Hot air rework station (recommended for SMD capacitor removal)
  • Fine solder wick (1–2 mm)
  • Tweezers (anti-static, fine-point)
  • Quality SMD electrolytic capacitors (Panasonic, Nichicon, or equivalent — 105°C rated)
  • Isopropyl alcohol (99%+) and lint-free swabs
  • Digital multimeter with capacitance measurement
  • Flux (no-clean type)
  • Fine leaded solder (0.5 mm) or solder paste for SMD work
  • Magnification (loupe, headband magnifier, or stereo microscope)
  • Safety glasses
  • Anti-static wrist strap

Motherboard capacitor list

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The ST Book motherboard is a compact, densely-packed board. The following electrolytic capacitors are present. Designators are based on documented board examination and may vary slightly between production runs.

Atari ST Book Motherboard — Electrolytic Capacitors
Designator Capacitance Voltage Type Notes
C1 100 µF 10V SMD electrolytic Main +5V rail decoupling
C2 100 µF 10V SMD electrolytic +5V rail decoupling
C3 47 µF 10V SMD electrolytic Secondary decoupling
C4 47 µF 10V SMD electrolytic Secondary decoupling
C5 22 µF 16V SMD electrolytic Power regulation
C6 22 µF 16V SMD electrolytic Power regulation
C7 10 µF 16V SMD electrolytic Audio circuit
C8 10 µF 16V SMD electrolytic Audio circuit
C9 4.7 µF 25V SMD electrolytic Reset/supervisory circuit
C10 4.7 µF 25V SMD electrolytic MIDI circuit
C11 4.7 µF 25V SMD electrolytic Serial port
C12 2.2 µF 50V SMD electrolytic
C13 1 µF 50V SMD electrolytic

Total: approximately 13 electrolytic capacitors on the motherboard.

Note: Due to the rarity of the ST Book, board-level documentation is limited. Always verify capacitor values by reading markings on each original component before removal. Photograph the board from multiple angles before beginning work.

Power regulation capacitors

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The power regulation section converts battery/adapter input to the system's internal voltage rails. Key capacitors in this section include the bulk decoupling capacitors (C1, C2) and the voltage regulator input/output filtering capacitors (C5, C6).

These are the most critical capacitors for system stability. If only performing a partial recap, prioritise these components.

SMD capacitor replacement procedure

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SMD electrolytic capacitor replacement requires more care than through-hole work:

  1. Remove all batteries and disconnect AC adapter.
  2. Open the case — Remove bottom screws, separate case halves carefully. Note screw positions and lengths.
  3. Photograph the board — Record capacitor positions, orientations, and polarity markings.
  4. Remove old capacitors — Use hot air (250–300°C, low airflow) to heat both pads simultaneously, then lift the component with tweezers. Alternatively, apply solder to one pad, then heat and tilt to remove one side at a time.
  5. Clean pads — Remove residual solder with fine solder wick. Clean the pad area with IPA to remove any flux residue or leaked electrolyte.
  6. Inspect pads — Check that PCB pads are intact. If pads have lifted, trace repair may be necessary before installing the new capacitor.
  7. Apply flux to pads — A thin layer of no-clean flux helps solder flow and adhesion.
  8. Pre-tin one pad — Apply a small amount of solder to one pad.
  9. Position new capacitor — Place the new cap on the pads, ensuring correct polarity. The negative stripe on the capacitor body must align with the negative pad marking.
  10. Solder first pad — Heat the pre-tinned pad while holding the cap in position with tweezers.
  11. Solder second pad — Apply solder to the opposite pad.
  12. Inspect under magnification — Check for solder bridges, cold joints, and correct polarity.
  13. Clean — Remove flux residue with IPA.
  14. Test for shorts — Use multimeter to check for shorts between power rails and ground before reassembly.
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  • Use SMD electrolytic capacitors of equivalent package size. Through-hole radial capacitors will not fit in the ST Book's slim enclosure.
  • Match or exceed original voltage rating — e.g. replace a 10V cap with 10V or 16V.
  • Match original capacitance value.
  • 105°C rated capacitors are preferred for longevity.
  • Quality brands: Panasonic EEE-series, Nichicon UWT, Murata.
  • Verify physical dimensions carefully — the ST Book case allows minimal clearance above the board.

Alternative: tantalum or polymer replacements

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For some positions, SMD tantalum or polymer capacitors may be used as alternatives to aluminium electrolytics:

  • Tantalum — Lower ESR, longer life, but sensitive to voltage spikes. Use only where the voltage rating provides adequate margin (recommend 2× operating voltage).
  • Polymer aluminium — Low ESR, very long life, no electrolyte leakage risk. Slightly larger than standard SMD electrolytics. Excellent choice where they physically fit.
  • Do not use tantalum on unregulated power inputs — voltage spikes can cause tantalum caps to fail short-circuit (potentially catastrophic).

Voltage verification after recap

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After recapping, measure the following voltage rails before reassembling the case:

Rail Expected voltage
+5V 4.75V – 5.25V
+12V 11.4V – 12.6V
-12V -10.8V – -13.2V

Test on both battery power and AC adapter to verify regulation under both power sources.

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