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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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On Wed, 16 Nov 2005 07:36:04 GMT, "Ray L. Volts"
wrote: "James Sweet" wrote in message news:J8Aef.15434$%t4.5289@trnddc07... Al wrote: I have a Sharp Carousel microwave, model R-305EW and the timer/display has developed a problem: part of one of the LCD-style numbers no longer lights up. Is it costly to replace the display on this unit? Is it a relatively easy job for a handyguy with average skills? The display is probably fine, likely just needs the connections cleaned if it uses one of the rubber contact strips, or the solder touched up. Read the FAQ on microwave safety, then once you've done that this is most likely something you can fix yourself. Sadly, these are not that simple anymore. The display ribbon is glued/taped to the controller board. There is no solder -- good contact depends on pressure from the ribbon (it's bent in a "U" loop) and the tape pulling from the opposing side of the board. If you peel off the display cable to clean the contacts, GOOD LUCK getting it realigned with the tightly-spaced traces and maintaining good contact. Solder can't be substituted for the method used, as the heat will absolutely destroy the business end of the display cable. In my case, the display started missing a couple of segments, then a bunch of them went soon afterward. All the discrete components on the controller board tested ok. The controller IC still worked as far as the oven functions were concered. The IC itself isn't replaceable (it's the "black blob" type), so there are only two options: buy a new board set which costs more than the oven or buy a new oven. This is a blatant example of a product designed to ward off repairs and to have a relatively short lifespan. I've got a Sharp with the same problem, bad LCD display unit. Like you said they want way too much for a replacement. In my case nearly 50 bucks just for the crystal module. all else works fine on the oven, you just have to push the buttons carefully to get whatever time and cooking level desired.( I'll find a donor some day with a dead magnetron that'll hopefully have a good display. Untill then it's push the buttons slowly and carefully.) |
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