I appreciate the post, but I would like some claims that are easier for me to cite. So, I'm going to clean up and start over.
Your conclusion sounds valid but insufficiently explained. I need more than just "this looks like that, and it has ICs and coils, therefore".
I'll try to explain what I see, in order to establish a common frame of reference.
I'm assuming the board is laid out physically to maximize distance between heat-producing components, and that the routing roughly matches the component interaction/flow.
On the "topside" photo, I'll identify areas of components:
- On the AC input side (red/blue, rear left of the charger), there is a coil and then some Carli components that are likely power capacitors I can't find a photo match for.
- On the DC output side (red/black rear right of the charger), there is a capacitor bank.
- Under the heatsinks are presumably the core switching power supplies. I've uncovered them once and will try to do this more thoroughly to identify them.
- The 3 large capacitors in front are AiSHi LM series
rated 450V (DC~) 330µF (datasheet at
https://aishi.us/files/LM.pdf)
So what more do you want to know?
I want to work out what each area of components performs, and what risks the board design is susceptible to, given the location of this fire within the subsystems.
If there's anything an owner can do to mitigate design weaknesses in the board, that would be helpful, and also if there's basically nothing the owner can do other than use contact cleaner on the inlet and grease around connections.
But it is difficult to tell what failed first by those photos, because many things fried at once, which is the norm for switching power supply failures. When one part shorts out, it usually takes at least a half dozen other parts with it. The most common failures are shorted diodes and the next most common are electrolytic capacitors shorting out. But it's usually difficult to even tell what blew first between those two, because a shorted capacitor can blow a diode from the overload and a shorted diode can short out an electrolytic capacitor from the excessive ripple.
That's the reason why the teardown doesn't label anything, because I can't triage that with as much damage as there is in the center.
For what it's worth, a teardown on this charger type is extremely rare. This might be our one chance to understand this problem and try to form a case to get Zero to obsolete this design in favor of something more robust (especially since this basic design was developed in 2013 for 2014+ models).
The third most common failure would be the high power transistors (underside photo, the two items with three leads each under the small heat sink, but I see nothing burnt in that area on yours)
Which area is that? I need specific labels somehow. Try taking one of the images and marking it up with colored rectangles and/or text. I can retrofit labels onto close-ups that I'm preparing for upload now.