Difficulty

Very difficult

Steps

4

Time Required

                          30 minutes            

Sections

1

  • TVS Diode
  • 4 steps

Flags

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Introduction

In some cases, affected units’ center LEDs may flash dimly when the reset button is held pressed in with the POE power in place. This may only be visible if the board is out of it’s chassis.

The UAP-AC-LITE contains an over-voltage protection circuit driven by a unidirectional TVS diode. While this diode is not a fuse, it’s expected failure mode is to short, and divert power away from the rest of the board. This short is also detected by the PoE injector, which causes it to not deliver power.

In this guide will show how to:

  • Disassemble the UAP-AC-LITETest if the over voltage protection TVS diode has failedRemove and replace the broken diode

What you need

Step 1

              Open the UAP-AC-LITE               
  • The front cover is secured by 5 tabs.
  • Work the Jimmy into the space near a clip, and create a big enough gap to insert a prying tool. Moderate pressure from a prying tool should force the clips open.
  • There are a number of alignment tabs that can get in the way. It is best to try and work the Jimmy towards the center of the front cover, hugging its inside surface.
  • The PCB is held down by 3 screws. It is not necessary to remove the board for this repair.

The front cover is secured by 5 tabs.

Work the Jimmy into the space near a clip, and create a big enough gap to insert a prying tool. Moderate pressure from a prying tool should force the clips open.

There are a number of alignment tabs that can get in the way. It is best to try and work the Jimmy towards the center of the front cover, hugging its inside surface.

The PCB is held down by 3 screws. It is not necessary to remove the board for this repair.

1024

Step 2

              Test the TVS diode               
  • The TVS diode is located between the antenna and a large IC on the RJ45 port side of the board. It’s PCB marking is D6.
  • It is a LittleFuse 24V uni-directional TVS diode, with J leads (SMBJ24A). Note the location of the white bar on the diode, which marks its orientation.
  • Use a multimeter or ohmmeter to test that the diode has indeed shorted. A shorted diode will read less than 1 Ohm in both directions. A working diode will read significantly higher resistance in one direction relative to the other.
  • If the diode is not shorted, then something else is wrong, and proceeding further may or may not help fix your access point.

The TVS diode is located between the antenna and a large IC on the RJ45 port side of the board. It’s PCB marking is D6.

It is a LittleFuse 24V uni-directional TVS diode, with J leads (SMBJ24A). Note the location of the white bar on the diode, which marks its orientation.

Use a multimeter or ohmmeter to test that the diode has indeed shorted. A shorted diode will read less than 1 Ohm in both directions. A working diode will read significantly higher resistance in one direction relative to the other.

If the diode is not shorted, then something else is wrong, and proceeding further may or may not help fix your access point.

Step 3

              Remove the broken diode               
  • Desolder the broken diode. Apply heat to one lead while lifting the diode with tweezers. Once the solder melts the part should lift up. Repeat on the other lead.
  • If the solder does not seem to melt, and the temperature is already plenty high, try using a bigger tip. Sometimes that helps to transfer more heat to the lead, melting the solder faster.
  • Once the shorted diode is removed, the access point should power up and work as normal. However, omitting this part will potentially cause more damage if an over voltage event occurs.

Desolder the broken diode. Apply heat to one lead while lifting the diode with tweezers. Once the solder melts the part should lift up. Repeat on the other lead.

If the solder does not seem to melt, and the temperature is already plenty high, try using a bigger tip. Sometimes that helps to transfer more heat to the lead, melting the solder faster.

Once the shorted diode is removed, the access point should power up and work as normal. However, omitting this part will potentially cause more damage if an over voltage event occurs.

Step 4

              Install new diode               
  • Make sure to test the new diode before installing it. A working TVS diode will show much higher resistance in one direction relative to the other.
  • Install the new diode.
  • Note the marking on the diode which indicates its orientation. The bar must be pointing towards the antenna.
  • Apply flux to the pads, then add a thin layer of solder. If solder does not stick to the pads, you can add it to the underside of the diode pins instead.
  • Hold the new diode in place using tweezers. While applying downward force, apply heat to one pin near the solder until the solder melts and makes a connection. Repeat with the other lead.
  • Verify that the connections are good. There should be continuity between: one pin of D6 and a pin in VR3, and; the other pin of D6 and D7.

Make sure to test the new diode before installing it. A working TVS diode will show much higher resistance in one direction relative to the other.

Install the new diode.

Note the marking on the diode which indicates its orientation. The bar must be pointing towards the antenna.

Apply flux to the pads, then add a thin layer of solder. If solder does not stick to the pads, you can add it to the underside of the diode pins instead.

Hold the new diode in place using tweezers. While applying downward force, apply heat to one pin near the solder until the solder melts and makes a connection. Repeat with the other lead.

Verify that the connections are good. There should be continuity between: one pin of D6 and a pin in VR3, and; the other pin of D6 and D7.

To reassemble your device, reattach front cover.

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                                                                                      22 other people completed this guide.                                             

Author

                                      with 3 other contributors 

                    Yang Zhao                     

Member since: 11/01/2016

801 Reputation

                                      1 Guide authored                  



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Maxime Rousseau - Oct 21, 2017

Reply

Do you think this problem has something to do with Ubiquiti dropping 24V devices altogether? I’ve read about the firmware problems that make 24V passive + POE switch setups a fire hazard, but do you think think this is a design choice or a fix for a flakey on-device power circuit?

Thanks for publishing this, I’ll give it a dead AP I have.

Maxime Rousseau - Oct 24, 2017

Mine broke in exactly the use case warned against here: https://community.ubnt.com/t5/UniFi-Wire…. This kind of failure definitely seems to be linked to the ‘accidental’ 48V activation issue. Unfortunately the device is OOW, but I’ll try to hit up Ubiquiti and see if I can get some good will.

effbees - Aug 22, 2018

Reply

Thank you! This fixed my Unifi AC Lite, I plugged it into a PoE switch that fried that diode.

Maya S. - Jun 30, 2019

Reply

Hi, can some help identify the corresponding Diode from this Tutorial on the Unifi UAP-AC-HD? Its POE sections is a little bigger. But didn’t find shorted Diodes. POE LED on Switch is on, but AP not powering on. It boots when 5 V are supplied manually, so somethings is wrong on the poe section.

https://i.imgur.com/WvljJ4T.jpg

It gets warm around the silver elko / capacity next to the transformator. But that’s all what I was able to figure out.

Roly - Jul 2, 2019

Reply

Good afternoon, if you were so kind to help me identify what the TVS diode is on this Unifi AC HD badge, thank you very much in advance!

https://i.imgur.com/yl9Hmk1.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/KchTfwr.jpg