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TP-Link Kasa KP105 - rapidly power cycling when plugged in

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    TP-Link Kasa KP105 - rapidly power cycling when plugged in

    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.

    Click image for larger version

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    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.
    Attached Files
    Dell E7450 | i5-5300U | 16GB DDR3 | 256GB SSD

    #2
    Just smashed a fully working one open, this time a Tapo P100 (I trust none of them now so a worthy sacrifice) - it has an identical PCB (2084500437) and an identical spec capacitor in that position but it is ChengX brand this time. It isn't vented but these plugs have not had the same amount of use so I am not certain this issue is fixed.

    I can't see any date or batch codes on them that clearly indicate which might belong to a faulty batch
    Attached Files
    Dell E7450 | i5-5300U | 16GB DDR3 | 256GB SSD

    Comment


      #3
      Usually what makes them not work are bad capacitors, cracked solder joints and bad flash, doesn't matter what brand. These things are so cheap, mass produced, manufacturing cost cutting, expect cheap. But cheap works too, if you know how to fix it.

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