Have this fridge, laboratory grade unit, not working fully.
It's designed with a chilling unit at the top, on the inside, and a fan just below that. When the door is closed, the fan blows the cold air down through the fridge, and when the door opens, the fan switches off, presumably so that it doesn't blow all the cold air out.
The fan isn't switching on, so in addition to not having uniform cold throughout the fridge, the chilling tubes tend to ice up. I took the lid off the top, electronics are in the lid, and when the door is opened and closed, I can hear the relevant relay clicking.
Now, separate to the main electronics board, off a connector at the relay I can hear clicking, is a small 200-240VAC to 12VDC switching power supply, see photos. When the door is closed, on the input of the switching power supply, I have 230V, and when the door is open, it drops to zero. So far so good.
On the DC output of the switching power supply, door open, I have zero volts, but when the door is closed, I'm only getting about 3V, so not enough to power the 12V fan downstream of this switching power supply.
So, it looks like I've found the source of the problem. The 470uF/16V cap at the DC output is a bit bloated, I swapped it with an unbloated one from a donor board, but the output voltage actually dropped further.
The board has a couple of chips, a VIPer12A, and an 817CN. Is there anything else on there worth testing further? There is some gunk on the input side, but I think it's just some brown glue for holding the components during manufacture.
Would something like this be a suitable replacement? Description says it's for LEDs, but assume the input and output voltage is all that matters.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/284961060022
It's designed with a chilling unit at the top, on the inside, and a fan just below that. When the door is closed, the fan blows the cold air down through the fridge, and when the door opens, the fan switches off, presumably so that it doesn't blow all the cold air out.
The fan isn't switching on, so in addition to not having uniform cold throughout the fridge, the chilling tubes tend to ice up. I took the lid off the top, electronics are in the lid, and when the door is opened and closed, I can hear the relevant relay clicking.
Now, separate to the main electronics board, off a connector at the relay I can hear clicking, is a small 200-240VAC to 12VDC switching power supply, see photos. When the door is closed, on the input of the switching power supply, I have 230V, and when the door is open, it drops to zero. So far so good.
On the DC output of the switching power supply, door open, I have zero volts, but when the door is closed, I'm only getting about 3V, so not enough to power the 12V fan downstream of this switching power supply.
So, it looks like I've found the source of the problem. The 470uF/16V cap at the DC output is a bit bloated, I swapped it with an unbloated one from a donor board, but the output voltage actually dropped further.
The board has a couple of chips, a VIPer12A, and an 817CN. Is there anything else on there worth testing further? There is some gunk on the input side, but I think it's just some brown glue for holding the components during manufacture.
Would something like this be a suitable replacement? Description says it's for LEDs, but assume the input and output voltage is all that matters.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/284961060022
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