Let’s make a USB-C coupler to extend USB-C cables #electronics #soldering #diy
Let’s make a USB-C coupler to extend USB-C cables #electronics #soldering #diy


Let’s make a USB-C coupler to extend USB-C cables #electronics #soldering #diy

What’s inside a hard drive, and why is data recovery so expensive? #harddrives #diskimaging #hdd

What size is my soldering iron, and how do I use it?

A new video has been posted entitled Eye See You – ECU repair

Trying out a DDR4 memory channel tester


My bench is a work in progress towards operational efficiency and effectiveness.
Much like my own mind. I continue to explore and optimise.




No matter how hard you try, you will not breach my opsec.
There is no default admin account, no local users in fact, and two factors are required.
Comments and reviews are filtered and require approval, so no amount of attempted abuse or slander will succeed.
You may as well give up now, this site is not one you’re going to compromise.
If you want confidence like this, contact me for advice.


In an attempt to make most of the space I have, I’ve been busily building out a 3D printed system called Multiwall, as of last week now called Multibuild.
This system has many different supports and interconnects, from basic peg boards to full draw and shelf systems.
I’ve still got a ways to go, but it’s now at a workable stage.


Check out https://multibuild.io/ for all the details

Hey folks, Nathan here, your Sydney-based wizard for resurrecting tech that’s been written off as dead. Today, I’m diving into a recent conquest: breathing new life into a Yamaha RX-A820 AV receiver. This beast packs 150W per channel and is a solid workhorse for home theater setups, but like so many aging electronics, it came to me with a laundry list of gremlins. What started as random shutdowns turned into a multi-stage detective story – and yeah, it ties right back into the “Conquests of the Impossible” mindset I’ve been hammering on about.
A while back, I snagged this RX-A820 second-hand. Great specs on paper – 7.2 channels, HDMI switching, network features – but it had a nasty habit of powering off after just a short while, even at low volumes. No error codes, no obvious overheating, just… poof. Gone.
First things first: power supply checks. Voltage rails looked off, and after probing around with the multimeter, the culprit emerged – a faulty bridge rectifier. These diodes convert AC to DC and are the unsung heroes of any amp’s power stage. When they fail (often from age, surges, or heat stress), the whole system starves. Swapped it out with a beefy equivalent, and boom: the amp fired up, humming with that clean, powerful Yamaha sound. Music flowed, movies thumped. Victory, right?
Not so fast.
With the basics sorted, I hooked it up via HDMI for some proper testing – streaming, Blu-ray, the works. It ran beautifully… for about 2-3 minutes. Then, shutdown again. No warnings, just off. Power cycle, repeat. Annoying as hell.
What could be the problem now? Overheating on a specific board? Firmware glitch? Short somewhere? I isolated it: analog inputs worked fine indefinitely, but HDMI triggered the fail. That pointed to the HDMI processing circuit – likely power filtering issues there, as those sections handle high-speed digital signals and can be finicky with noise or voltage dips.
Dug into the service manual (pro tip: always source these online if you can – Yamaha’s are decent). Zoomed in on the HDMI board’s filtering capacitors. These caps smooth out ripple in the DC supply, but electrolytics degrade over time, especially in hot environments like an amp chassis. Sure enough, visual inspection showed bulging and leakage on a couple.
Desoldering time. But as I was carefully removing one suspect cap… pop! It exploded mid-process. Electrolyte spray everywhere – a reminder that even “dead” caps can hold a charge or fail dramatically under heat. Safety goggles, folks – always.
Cleaned up the mess, inspected for board damage (luckily none), and replaced the lot with high-quality, high-temp electrolytics rated for the job. Fired it up again, HDMI input engaged.
Now? She hums along for hours at a time. Crystal-clear audio, stable video passthrough, no more surprise naps. The RX-A820 is back in fighting form, ready to anchor someone’s home setup instead of landfill fodder.
This repair wasn’t just about swapping parts – it’s a microcosm of how I approach “impossible” problems, whether it’s a fried receiver or the fractured systems in our lives. From Conquests of the Impossible:
If you’re wrestling with a shutdown-prone amp or similar tech woes in Sydney, drop me a line at 02 7813 8999. We’ll diagnose it properly – no upsells, just results.
And if this sparks thoughts on conquering your own impossibles, check out the evolving framework in Conquests of the Impossible. More rings (elements) dropping soon.
Stay repairing, stay conquering.
— Nathan Organ Sydney, March 2026

