WaltzingKea 3mo ago • 100%
Yeah I guess heat-shrink would do the job most of the time. But for when you have connectors that are too big to fit the right heat-shrink over or want to splice more than 2 wires together and want a waterproof seal over them this could be useful.
WaltzingKea 8mo ago • 100%
Bad. I have a Raspberry Pi 4 hanging from a HDMI cable going up to a projector, then have a 2TB SSD hanging from the Raspberry Pi. I host Nextcloud and Transmission on my RPi. Use Kodi for viewing media through my projector.
WaltzingKea 1y ago • 100%
Four loafs of bread later with no issues, opened it up and everything looks fine :)
WaltzingKea 1y ago • 100%
Yeah, didn't like the ones that would just slide down when you removed the cap.
Simple bowden tube cap. https://www.printables.com/model/521608-bowden-tube-cap
WaltzingKea 1y ago • 100%
The case is basically fully metal, just a bit of plastic inside for mounting the PCB to and a few other bits of plastic outside. Plus there is a temperature fuse in the case also.
From the resistor size (11.5 x 4.5mm) I think it would have been a 2W resistor when comparing to sizes on Digikey. I made a 500 Ohm 2W resistor from 8 1/4W 1K resistors then put a larger resistor in parallel to that to bring it down, measured it to 489 Ohms.
I'm going to run it a few times then open it up again to see if there is any new damage to the board before returning it.
WaltzingKea 1y ago • 100%
Success!
WaltzingKea 1y ago • 100%
Thanks! I'll try replacing it with a 490 ohm resistor and see if it works again.
The element in the bread maker looks like it came loose a bit and made slight contact with the internal metal housing. I wonder if that caused the resistive element to sink more current than the PCB was designed for, burning out the resistor.
Mates bread maker stopped working so I had a look inside and saw this burned resistor. I'm guessing the heat changed the colors a bit so wondering if anyone has experience in reading cooked resistor values. I removed it from the PCB and measured it at 403 Ohms. Thanks for any help.