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microwave riddle?
Microwave burned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic
http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance |
microwave riddle?
On Fri, 19 Sep 2008 20:05:27 -0700 (PDT), poster
put finger to keyboard and composed: Microwave burned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance I can't find anything in the Microwave Repair FAQ that discusses the high voltage protector diode: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/micfaq.htm I did find a datasheet for your HVR6x2 diode, though: http://www.dccomponents.com/products...age/HVR6x2.pdf This device consists of two back-to-back HV diodes, one drawn larger than the other, the smaller one with a 1500V reverse breakdown voltage, the larger with 6000V. AFAICS, if your HV capacitor were to go open, then the smaller diode could see a reverse voltage close to the peak secondary voltage of the power transformer (~2000V). This would exceed its rating and presumably it would fail. So IMO the capacitor is one possible suspect, although I would think that anything which allowed a good capacitor to charge in the reverse direction may also cause the same failure. Therefore it may be wise to replace the HV diode as well, just in case it is leaky. Also check that the magnetron's filament is not shorted to the case. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
microwave riddle?
On Sep 21, 2:21 am, Franc Zabkar wrote:
On Fri, 19 Sep 2008 20:05:27 -0700 (PDT), poster put finger to keyboard and composed: Microwaveburned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance I can't find anything in theMicrowaveRepair FAQ that discusses the high voltage protector diode: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/micfaq.htm I did find a datasheet for your HVR6x2 diode, though:http://www.dccomponents.com/products...igh_Voltage/HV... This device consists of two back-to-back HV diodes, one drawn larger than the other, the smaller one with a 1500V reverse breakdown voltage, the larger with 6000V. AFAICS, if your HV capacitor were to go open, then the smaller diode could see a reverse voltage close to the peak secondary voltage of the power transformer (~2000V). This would exceed its rating and presumably it would fail. So IMO the capacitor is one possible suspect, although I would think that anything which allowed a good capacitor to charge in the reverse direction may also cause the same failure. Therefore it may be wise to replace the HV diode as well, just in case it is leaky. Also check that the magnetron's filament is not shorted to the case. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. Thanks for the answer however you are assuming the anode of the bigger diode is connected to the transformer but it was the other way around because this was the original part http://www.geocities.com/anglomont/hvr-d.jpg On the other hand could it be that it would take 3seconds to charge the capacitor to 1.5kv in reverse direction assuming 0.5ma leakage current, however fuse blows up immediately after the oven is turned on Checked filament -ok, and from schematic it seems that if grill- heater contacts were problematic that would blow the main and not the fast fuse |
microwave riddle?
On Mon, 22 Sep 2008 07:45:19 -0700 (PDT), poster
put finger to keyboard and composed: On Sep 21, 2:21 am, Franc Zabkar wrote: On Fri, 19 Sep 2008 20:05:27 -0700 (PDT), poster put finger to keyboard and composed: Microwaveburned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance I can't find anything in theMicrowaveRepair FAQ that discusses the high voltage protector diode: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/micfaq.htm I did find a datasheet for your HVR6x2 diode, though:http://www.dccomponents.com/products...igh_Voltage/HV... This device consists of two back-to-back HV diodes, one drawn larger than the other, the smaller one with a 1500V reverse breakdown voltage, the larger with 6000V. AFAICS, if your HV capacitor were to go open, then the smaller diode could see a reverse voltage close to the peak secondary voltage of the power transformer (~2000V). This would exceed its rating and presumably it would fail. So IMO the capacitor is one possible suspect, although I would think that anything which allowed a good capacitor to charge in the reverse direction may also cause the same failure. Therefore it may be wise to replace the HV diode as well, just in case it is leaky. Also check that the magnetron's filament is not shorted to the case. - Franc Zabkar Thanks for the answer however you are assuming the anode of the bigger diode is connected to the transformer ... No, I was thinking that the smaller diode connects to the transformer. That's how it's drawn in the schematic diagram. If the dual diode were reversed, then the smaller diode would always see the voltage of a fully charged capacitor, which would presumably exceed its breakdown voltage. ... but it was the other way around because this was the original part http://www.geocities.com/anglomont/hvr-d.jpg On the other hand could it be that it would take 3seconds to charge the capacitor to 1.5kv in reverse direction assuming 0.5ma leakage current, however fuse blows up immediately after the oven is turned on Checked filament -ok, and from schematic it seems that if grill- heater contacts were problematic that would blow the main and not the fast fuse If the capacitor is open, then, during the negative half cycle of the mains, you effectively have two reverse biased diodes (HVR and small). 10kV 6kV 1.5kV Gnd o---||---|--||--||----o transformer secondary HVR | big small | magnetron | Gnd How this reverse voltage is shared between the two diodes would probably depend on the reverse leakage characteristics of each. I'm assuming that no reverse current flows through the magnetron (its filament is cold). If current does flow via the magnetron, then the small diode would see the full reverse voltage. Perhaps the diode survives until just after the filament begins to warm up? - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
microwave riddle?
On Sep 20, 4:21 pm, Franc Zabkar wrote:
On Fri, 19 Sep 2008 20:05:27 -0700 (PDT), poster put finger to keyboard and composed: Microwaveburned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance I can't find anything in theMicrowaveRepair FAQ that discusses the high voltage protector diode: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/micfaq.htm I did find a datasheet for your HVR6x2 diode, though:http://www.dccomponents.com/products...igh_Voltage/HV... This device consists of two back-to-back HV diodes, one drawn larger than the other, the smaller one with a 1500V reverse breakdown voltage, the larger with 6000V. AFAICS, if your HV capacitor were to go open, then the smaller diode could see a reverse voltage close to the peak secondary voltage of the power transformer (~2000V). This would exceed its rating and presumably it would fail. So IMO the capacitor is one possible suspect, although I would think that anything which allowed a good capacitor to charge in the reverse direction may also cause the same failure. Therefore it may be wise to replace the HV diode as well, just in case it is leaky. Also check that the magnetron's filament is not shorted to the case. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. thanks again What is actually the curved line close to the transformer and directly connected to magnetron? What if upon disconnecting the both diodes fast fuse blows again when either microwave or grill cooking is started? What is it exactly connected between a8-a7? |
microwave riddle?
On Sep 20, 4:21 pm, Franc Zabkar wrote:
On Fri, 19 Sep 2008 20:05:27 -0700 (PDT), poster put finger to keyboard and composed: Microwaveburned the fast fuse and 'rectifier' 2x062 on this schematic http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg Replaced it with hvr 6x2 diode however once again it and fuse burned though "high voltage rectifier" diode hvr1x stayed ok (hvr 6x2 short, hvr 1x conducting 0.25 ma when tested with 4.5v) Magnetron ok, so what could be the reason for this-perhaps capacitor or some contact with oven interior along points A or B? thanks in advance I can't find anything in theMicrowaveRepair FAQ that discusses the high voltage protector diode: http://www.repairfaq.org/sam/micfaq.htm I did find a datasheet for your HVR6x2 diode, though:http://www.dccomponents.com/products...igh_Voltage/HV... This device consists of two back-to-back HV diodes, one drawn larger than the other, the smaller one with a 1500V reverse breakdown voltage, the larger with 6000V. AFAICS, if your HV capacitor were to go open, then the smaller diode could see a reverse voltage close to the peak secondary voltage of the power transformer (~2000V). This would exceed its rating and presumably it would fail. So IMO the capacitor is one possible suspect, although I would think that anything which allowed a good capacitor to charge in the reverse direction may also cause the same failure. Therefore it may be wise to replace the HV diode as well, just in case it is leaky. Also check that the magnetron's filament is not shorted to the case. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. also here-http://www.repairfaq.org/REPAIR/F_micfaq2.html#MICFAQ_017 i found this Problem: Fuse blows when initiating cook cycle. Possible causes: 1. Defective interlock switches or misaligned door. 2. Shorted HV capacitor. 3. Shorted HV diode. 4. Shorted magnetron (probably won't blow main fuse but HV fuse if used). !5. Defective triac. 6. Old age or power surges. 7. Defective HV transformer. !8. Short in wiring due to vibration or poor manufacturing. |
microwave riddle?
On Wed, 24 Sep 2008 19:31:52 -0700 (PDT), poster
put finger to keyboard and composed: http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg What is actually the curved line close to the transformer and directly connected to magnetron? That's the transformer winding that supplies 3VAC to the magnetron's filament. What if upon disconnecting the both diodes fast fuse blows again when either microwave or grill cooking is started? According to Sam's Microwave FAQ ... "An open HV diode will result in AC instead of DC across the magnetron with a peak negative value (the only one that matters) about 1/2 of what it should be. The result will likely be little or no detectable heat but no other symptoms". If the fuse blows again, then I'd be looking at the power transformer or the magnetron. What is it exactly connected between a8-a7? That's the transformer (and metal oxide varistor) that is part of the low voltage DC supply for the control board. One secondary winding supplies the +5V (?) logic, the other probably supplies the display filament. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
microwave riddle?
On Sep 24, 9:09 pm, Franc Zabkar wrote:
On Wed, 24 Sep 2008 19:31:52 -0700 (PDT), poster put finger to keyboard and composed: http://geocities.com/anglomont/mw.jpg What is actually the curved line close to the transformer and directly connected to magnetron? That's the transformer winding that supplies 3VAC to the magnetron's filament. What if upon disconnecting the both diodes fast fuse blows again when eithermicrowaveor grill cooking is started? According to Sam'sMicrowaveFAQ ... "An open HV diode will result in AC instead of DC across the magnetron with a peak negative value (the only one that matters) about 1/2 of what it should be. The result will likely be little or no detectable heat but no other symptoms". If the fuse blows again, then I'd be looking at the power transformer or the magnetron. What is it exactly connected between a8-a7? That's the transformer (and metal oxide varistor) that is part of the low voltage DC supply for the control board. One secondary winding supplies the +5V (?) logic, the other probably supplies the display filament. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. thanks for input if the transformer secondary was shorted inside it would not be able to supply voltage high enough to burn the rectifier diode when it was replaced so maybe wiring is a good suspect since magnetron seems ok- that could be tested with turning on grill operation only ? |
microwave riddle?
On Fri, 26 Sep 2008 23:00:09 -0700 (PDT), poster
put finger to keyboard and composed: if the transformer secondary was shorted inside it would not be able to supply voltage high enough to burn the rectifier diode when it was replaced so maybe wiring is a good suspect since magnetron seems ok- that could be tested with turning on grill operation only ? I agree that the transformer is probably OK. All I can add is that whenever I've seen a failure in the protection diode, I've always replaced it and the rectifier diode as a pair, and I've tested the magnetron and cap. I can't see what else could cause the protector to fail. BTW, I don't understand how you can confidently state that the magnetron is good unless you've tried it in another oven. - Franc Zabkar -- Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email. |
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