I would wait on the tokins for now. We don't want to remove any tokins until we're sure they are bad. Let's gain internal SYSCON acces for now and see if we can trigger those codes again under more controlled conditions...
Capture a "becount" command. I'm just curious to see the usage time. Also, if you could clear the errlof that would be useful, so we know what causes any errors that happen. For example, we know that 1001 and 1004 can be caused by fliping the PWR rocker. So pay attention to that. We want to see if those codes get generated on their own. Then use "bringup" to start the console. "powerstate" to see what's on. Wait for it to shut down on it's own after 50s. Then use "lasterrlog" and "errorlog." Copy all that into notepad and paste into code dialong on the forums. If the codes are the same, there is no harm in adding a few tantalums in parallel to test with (parasite that can be easily removes without removing tokins first).
@Pacorretaco could you do a becount as well? Just curious.
It's normal for the voltage to spike about 150mV above the nominal amount initially upon boot, then regulate down to the right voltage. But that takes about 25ms to resolve. It might be long enough for you meter to briefly flash a voltage above 2v. It's so short a pulse it probably has a hard time resolving it accurately. But if you see the voltage for a few seconds, long enough for the meter to get an accurate fix and refresh a few times with the same reading, then that's a problem.
23 is pretty early in the boot up sequence. PS3#7 had a 10 1002 after I removed the first RSX tokin. It only happened once, while I was getting oscilloscope images. All the rest were 80 1002's. I don't remember how many times I turned the console on/off while gathering the images I needed for the tests, but it was probably around 10 or more. So ~1/10 resulted in an instant YLOD with the 10 1002. That's what can happen with too little capacitance on the RSX. Going further caused 09 3004's and instant YLOD most of the time, although I did get it to POST one 80 1002 in that round of tests. So there is a range where 1002's occur. 09 was 3004. 10 was 1002. you've reported a 23 1002. So it looks like 10 - 80 1002's are possible, depending on when the volltage spike interfered with the startup sequence. If it makes it past boot first and the spike occurs during the bootloader/XMB it'll trigger 80 1002.