DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Electronics Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/electronics-repair/)
-   -   Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057 (https://www.diybanter.com/electronics-repair/345351-sanyo-microwave-oven-em-s1057.html)

[email protected] August 21st 12 04:28 AM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 
I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray rotates and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help of repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron. The magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is available online.

However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not be feasible..

Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer with the magnetron unplugged?

Thanks in advance.

Vernon

gregz August 21st 12 04:51 AM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 
wrote:
I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray rotates
and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help of
repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron. The
magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is available online.

However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am
afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not be feasible.

Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer with
the magnetron unplugged?

Thanks in advance.

Vernon


I think the transformer needs a load.

Greg

Winston August 21st 12 05:32 AM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 
gregz wrote:
wrote:
I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray rotates
and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help of
repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron. The
magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is available online.

However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am
afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not be feasible.

Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer with
the magnetron unplugged?

Thanks in advance.

Vernon


I think the transformer needs a load.


And at ca. 4.1 KV one would need a HV divider probe.

It would be trivially easy to kill yourself doing this.

(Just an observation.)

--Winston

[email protected] August 21st 12 04:21 PM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 
On Tuesday, August 21, 2012 12:32:57 PM UTC+8, Winston wrote:
gregz wrote:

wrote:


I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray rotates


and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help of


repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron. The


magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is available online.




However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am


afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not be feasible.




Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer with


the magnetron unplugged?




Thanks in advance.




Vernon




I think the transformer needs a load.




And at ca. 4.1 KV one would need a HV divider probe.



It would be trivially easy to kill yourself doing this.



(Just an observation.)



--Winston


Is there a way of checking the transformer?

Ian Field August 21st 12 10:00 PM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 


wrote in message
...
On Tuesday, August 21, 2012 12:32:57 PM UTC+8, Winston wrote:
gregz wrote:

wrote:


I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray
rotates


and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help
of


repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron.
The


magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is
available online.




However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am


afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not
be feasible.




Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer
with


the magnetron unplugged?




Thanks in advance.




Vernon




I think the transformer needs a load.




And at ca. 4.1 KV one would need a HV divider probe.



It would be trivially easy to kill yourself doing this.



(Just an observation.)



--Winston


Is there a way of checking the transformer?


Basically - power it up with no load, if it doesn't blow the fuse, there's a
high probability its OK.

Don't attempt to draw sparks from the HV terminal - I heard about an
apprentice doing that, the screwdriver he used had a crack in the handle,
and when his boss returned from the van with parts - he was laying on the
floor dead.

A S/C magnetron could have caused the rectifier to also fail S/C, a lesser
possibility is failure of the doubler capacitor. Sometimes there's a surge
supressor - looks similar to the rectifier, but has 2 diode symbols k to k
one big one smal - that can also fail S/C.

In over 2 decades I've never bought a microwave, very often its worth
rescuing units put out for scrap - if by any chance the don't work, they're
still a handy source of spares.


Cydrome Leader August 21st 12 10:54 PM

Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057
 
wrote:
I have a faulty Sanyo microwave oven EM-S1057, whereby the tray rotates and the bulb lights up but there is no heat produced. With the help of repairfaq site I managed to trace the faulty to a shorted magnetron. The magnetron is of the Galanz type part number M24FB-210A and it is available online.

However I am a little reluctant to replace the magnetron since I am afraid other components might be faulty and the repair cost would not be feasible.

Is it safe to check the voltages of the high voltage transformer with the magnetron unplugged?


If you don't have the correct high voltage probe, the short answer is no.

The part that will mess you up in a microwave oven is the filter cap. It
seems they all have bleed resistors across the terminals these days, but
we're still talking made in China, so you need to short out the cap
anyways.

If you're not ready to short out a 2kV 1uF cap or whatever it is, just
toss the microwave and get another.

Even if the magnetron took out the high voltage rectifier, you still want
to short out that cap before you replace that.

Microwaves these days are all sharp and nasty inside, they're like
grabbing at razor wire. yuck.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:27 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter