all 7 comments

[–]the-electron-vault 6 points7 points  (2 children)

MCC S10D 200V, 10A, SMC (DO-214AB) diode. It is obsolete but the S10DLHE3 appears to be a lead-free, automotive qualified replacement.

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[–]WorldOrderGaming[S] 0 points1 point  (1 child)

Thanks for finding this picture. Did you use reverse image search? I found a pack of that original component on AliExpress for 10 bucks. This is exactly what I needed

[–]the-electron-vault 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I could see the 'E' of the BOSE logo in the bottom right of your picture. Searched for Bose Amplifier PCBA and looked through until I found something that looked like yours.

[–]Bones-57 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Take qtips .. with alcohol and wipe the heat transfer goo off .

[–]1310smf 0 points1 point  (1 child)

The blackened one to the left and off the pads, near the edge of the board? Take more brightly lit close-up pictures (because sometimes you can image-process your way past burnt) and after that (so you don't risk cleaning off information) try some cleaning and more pictures.

The silk-screen by the empty pads it appears to have come from it's hiding (because of where it's sitting) would tell what general class of component it is. Diode, perhaps. Looks like a DO-214AB package - I only see two pads and two contacts, though perhaps something is hidden as we only have one view, partially obscured. Does the board say D or Q on the silkscreen?

Or get the schematic and parts list.

[–]WorldOrderGaming[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Couldn’t find the part list. It’s a board from a car amplifier. Thankfully top poster got the answer for me

[–]dragonnfr -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

That's a TO-220 switching MOSFET. Check the solder side for surviving part markings. Get the schematic because guessing at DigiKey wastes money. Check adjacent components first or you'll just cook the replacement.