One of my KP105 smart plugs failed today. It started very rapidly power cycling (you could hear the relay clicking on and off and the LED was going green/orange repeatedly).
I was going to just bin it but I opened it up out of curiosity. Found a swollen cap in the corner (bottom right of image). AiSHi brand, 470uF 10V 105*C. Not sure what purpose it serves exactly so can't comment on whether it is appropriately specced. Other members of this forum have reported similar findings with off-brand smart plugs but this is the first time I have seen evidence of this happening with a brand like TP-Link. This seems to be a common failure mode looking at their forums so I bet there are a lot of these out there.

Anyway I don't plan on repairing it as I smashed the casing with a hammer to remove it. But if you want to try and repair it in a manner that does not involve a hammer, there are 7 clips you need to overcome - one at the bottom, two on the sides and two at the top. You will have a really hard time getting it open but with the right tools it might be possible to do non-destructively.
I was going to just bin it but I opened it up out of curiosity. Found a swollen cap in the corner (bottom right of image). AiSHi brand, 470uF 10V 105*C. Not sure what purpose it serves exactly so can't comment on whether it is appropriately specced. Other members of this forum have reported similar findings with off-brand smart plugs but this is the first time I have seen evidence of this happening with a brand like TP-Link. This seems to be a common failure mode looking at their forums so I bet there are a lot of these out there.
Anyway I don't plan on repairing it as I smashed the casing with a hammer to remove it. But if you want to try and repair it in a manner that does not involve a hammer, there are 7 clips you need to overcome - one at the bottom, two on the sides and two at the top. You will have a really hard time getting it open but with the right tools it might be possible to do non-destructively.
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