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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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#1
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The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive
coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) |
#2
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"pedro" wrote in message
... The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) It's an air-cored transformer in its simplest form, with absolutely no "smarts" in the base unit - meaning you'll have 50Hz emanating from the base. Whereas with most battery-powered devices you expect the charge to gradually diminish, with these units the base unit usually fails long before the battery starts deteriorating. Almost invariably, the coil in the base goes open-circuit. Good luck in getting the base open (my one attempt revealed liberal use of epoxy), and when (or rather, if) you do, good luck in re-winding the coil. Given the time of year, you might just want to kill the proverbial pair of birds by buying her a new one - it'll be far less hassle. -- Bob Milutinovic Cognicom |
#3
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On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 22:15:19 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic"
wrote: "pedro" wrote in message .. . The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) It's an air-cored transformer in its simplest form, with absolutely no "smarts" in the base unit - meaning you'll have 50Hz emanating from the base. Thanks for the quick reply, Bob. I realised it was an air-cored transformer, but I allowed for the possibility that they were operating at a higher frequency to get decent coupling efficiency. I was still out looking for an AM portable to check if there was any 50Hz field around the base unit. Whereas with most battery-powered devices you expect the charge to gradually diminish, with these units the base unit usually fails long before the battery starts deteriorating. Almost invariably, the coil in the base goes open-circuit. Given the 2W nameplate rating, that's a pretty high Zin - about 300K if resistive. Some coil, so presumably a blocking cap to help keep the current half-decent. There goes the prospect of measuring for an O/C coil without cracking the case .... Good luck in getting the base open (my one attempt revealed liberal use of epoxy), and when (or rather, if) you do, good luck in re-winding the coil. Given the time of year, you might just want to kill the proverbial pair of birds by buying her a new one - it'll be far less hassle. This one has the cord end of the wall unit seemingly retained in the case with visible barbs on opposite sides of the case. They resist decent efforts to depress them though. If there is bugger-all of consequence in that wall unit, the only reason for the size is as a handle for the tri-lobe tool moulded thereon which undoes the toothbrush base. |
#4
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On 13/12/2013 10:20, pedro wrote:
The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) With an OralB charger base,DVM Fluke 77 and 1mH small choke near the spigot of the base , measured 0.45V ac, HF not mains frequency but Fluke still registered something |
#5
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I would check the coil in the hand piece. Either try a different base or
open by twisting. The hand piece coil is accessible. I fixed one that had opened and needed resoldering. "pedro" wrote in message ... The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) |
#6
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![]() "Bob Milutinovic" wrote: It's an air-cored transformer in its simplest form, with absolutely no "smarts" in the base unit - meaning you'll have 50Hz emanating from the base. Interesting... I always assumed that things like that did just drive a coil at the mains frequency, and I was a bit surprised to discover that was not the case for a couple of torch/nightlight combinations we have. I did not bother to try to trace out the circuit, but it comprises bridge rectifier, capacitor, a high-voltage transistor and not much else that I can remember besides the coil. A coil placed nearby one of those sniffs out a 23kHz signal. These toothbrushes are obviously different. I wonder what make them go down the one path vs the other? Andy Wood |
#7
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pedro wrote:
The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) The old ones (no idea what model #) have a simple charging circuit of a diode and a coil in the bottom of the handle, and 2 Ni-Cd batteries. I can't get that size battery anymore, so I rigged two larger cells outside and taped to the handle. It has worked for some time. I used to replace the cells every 2-3 years when the wouldn't hold charge anymore. Jon |
#9
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On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 22:15:19 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic"
wrote: "pedro" wrote in message .. . The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) It's an air-cored transformer in its simplest form, with absolutely no "smarts" in the base unit - meaning you'll have 50Hz emanating from the base. Whereas with most battery-powered devices you expect the charge to gradually diminish, with these units the base unit usually fails long before the battery starts deteriorating. Almost invariably, the coil in the base goes open-circuit. Good luck in getting the base open (my one attempt revealed liberal use of epoxy), and when (or rather, if) you do, good luck in re-winding the coil. Given the time of year, you might just want to kill the proverbial pair of birds by buying her a new one - it'll be far less hassle. Making sure we are using the same terms he Wall unit = the flat plug-into-the-outlet piece. Base is the coil assembly that the toothbrush sits atop to be charged. Toothbrush = obvious. I have a "search coil" of ~130 turns of 0.7mm wire on a bobbin. Bobbin ID is 15mm and coil OD is 31mm. Test #1: With the coil (unterminated) connected to the 15MHz CRO, absolutely zilch on max sensitivity when the coil is sitting flat atop the energised base. Definite flatliner. Test#2: Fed an AC current of 1A through the coil and brought the toothbrush right up to sitting on the bobbin. No interest whatsoever on the battery status/charge LCD. I have forgotten all my inductor stuff way back, but if the factory base has an input (label) of 2W then this may well have had a comparable field give or take the odd order of magnitude. Just to be sure we are talking about the same product. The previous generation product had a base-cum-storage-tower construction and the base had a keyed spigot for locating the toothbrush with the charge LED outwards. The one we have has an egg-shaped hole through the base with a matching shape on the bottom of the toothbrush. The video of battery replacement (link in my reply to Andy) shows the toothbrush under discussion. |
#10
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![]() pedro wrote: .. . . Interesting indeed. I have one of those combo devices here in bits and did trace out the circuit. One greencap-type cap had blown its guts and a resistor across it was cremated. Lacking values - and I suspect these *may* alter the oscillator frequency - it remains it bits. That 23kHz info may help reolve it. The two of those that I had both came from Aldi, but about a year apart. They had the same Aldi product code, 37737, and were both branded Delta, but the casings were slightly different. Like yours, one of them died. I took a peek at it, but in the end I decided I never was going to get around to trying to revive it so I chucked it out. I just had a look at the other one, which is still working, and found there is actually a bit more to it than I was remembering from my quick look at the one that died. Circuit could be similar to your one but maybe not exactly the same. There is a 2k resistor connected to the emitter of the transistor, but there does not appear to be a capacitor connected in parallel with it. Andy Wood |
#11
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I use both Braun and Sonicare toothbrushes. (I like variety.) The Brauns
charge fine on the Sonicare base (though they just "sit there", without even a nub to hold them in place). I have a few extra Sonicare chargers. I will gladly send one to any US resident who needs one, for the cost of postage, plus 50 cents handling. |
#12
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"pedro" wrote in message
... On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 22:15:19 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic" wrote: "pedro" wrote in message . .. The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) It's an air-cored transformer in its simplest form, with absolutely no "smarts" in the base unit - meaning you'll have 50Hz emanating from the base. Whereas with most battery-powered devices you expect the charge to gradually diminish, with these units the base unit usually fails long before the battery starts deteriorating. Almost invariably, the coil in the base goes open-circuit. Good luck in getting the base open (my one attempt revealed liberal use of epoxy), and when (or rather, if) you do, good luck in re-winding the coil. Given the time of year, you might just want to kill the proverbial pair of birds by buying her a new one - it'll be far less hassle. Making sure we are using the same terms he Wall unit = the flat plug-into-the-outlet piece. Base is the coil assembly that the toothbrush sits atop to be charged. Toothbrush = obvious. I have a "search coil" of ~130 turns of 0.7mm wire on a bobbin. Bobbin ID is 15mm and coil OD is 31mm. Test #1: With the coil (unterminated) connected to the 15MHz CRO, absolutely zilch on max sensitivity when the coil is sitting flat atop the energised base. Definite flatliner. Test#2: Fed an AC current of 1A through the coil and brought the toothbrush right up to sitting on the bobbin. No interest whatsoever on the battery status/charge LCD. I have forgotten all my inductor stuff way back, but if the factory base has an input (label) of 2W then this may well have had a comparable field give or take the odd order of magnitude. Just to be sure we are talking about the same product. The previous generation product had a base-cum-storage-tower construction and the base had a keyed spigot for locating the toothbrush with the charge LED outwards. The one we have has an egg-shaped hole through the base with a matching shape on the bottom of the toothbrush. The video of battery replacement (link in my reply to Andy) shows the toothbrush under discussion. Right you are; it was the previous generation which I had, in which the base was barely more than a small plastic disc and a nub-encrusted protrusion with which the brush docked. This morning I had a look at my daughter's newer unit, which has a slightly wedge-shaped oval as the docking point, and that seems to have considerably more bulk to the base unit - about an inch tall - which may likely house additional electronics. I still contend though that because of the relatively low price of these units, it's not worth pursuing repair for any reason other than personal satisfaction. -- Bob Milutinovic Cognicom |
#13
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I goofed somewhat. I have a couple of spare Braun chargers, as well. The offer
stands. |
#14
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On Mon, 16 Dec 2013 04:09:35 -0800, "William Sommerwerck"
wrote: I goofed somewhat. I have a couple of spare Braun chargers, as well. The offer stands. The offer is appreciated but as I'm "down under" and it would require an adaptor to connect to our AU/NZ outlet, it's probably easier to bite the bullet and purchase the replacement from the Braun guys. |
#15
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On Mon, 16 Dec 2013 18:47:33 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic"
wrote: This morning I had a look at my daughter's newer unit, which has a slightly wedge-shaped oval as the docking point, and that seems to have considerably more bulk to the base unit - about an inch tall - which may likely house additional electronics. The one we have is like this (but with Oz-pins of course ...): http://www.service.braun.com/product/big_img.asp?artGrp=3731&partno=0067040173&l=GB&c=A U&pic=parts|xl|67040173_xl.jpg Sorry about the URL mess. I still contend though that because of the relatively low price of these units, it's not worth pursuing repair for any reason other than personal satisfaction. That's the current Plan A. $34 plus $10 shipping from east coast, or $39.95 ex the one local source. Then I can do a Jeff Liebermann learn-by-destroying job on the existing wall unit. Wedging a couple of flat-blades into the current one showed what appeared to be the end of a pcb and clear silicon bog filling the entire enclosure. There's something in there warranting a pcb, and enquiring minds (this one at least) feel a need to know. |
#16
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"pedro" wrote in message
... On Mon, 16 Dec 2013 18:47:33 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic" wrote: This morning I had a look at my daughter's newer unit, which has a slightly wedge-shaped oval as the docking point, and that seems to have considerably more bulk to the base unit - about an inch tall - which may likely house additional electronics. The one we have is like this (but with Oz-pins of course ...): http://www.service.braun.com/product/big_img.asp?artGrp=3731&partno=0067040173&l=GB&c=A U&pic=parts|xl|67040173_xl.jpg Well that's an entirely different kettle of fish; the ones I've seen have the male mating on the base. This is my daughter's charging base looks like; mine was similar but much thinner - http://www.thepartsbiz.com/assets/images/84848387b.jpg Sorry about the URL mess. I still contend though that because of the relatively low price of these units, it's not worth pursuing repair for any reason other than personal satisfaction. That's the current Plan A. $34 plus $10 shipping from east coast, or $39.95 ex the one local source. Then I can do a Jeff Liebermann learn-by-destroying job on the existing wall unit. Wedging a couple of flat-blades into the current one showed what appeared to be the end of a pcb and clear silicon bog filling the entire enclosure. There's something in there warranting a pcb, and enquiring minds (this one at least) feel a need to know. Indeed, indeed. But just as I discovered when going through a similar procedure with a top-of-the-range Philips shaver in which the batteries had leaked (gotta love the old NiCd technology!), you'll likely find that the sum of the parts is worth a tenth of what they want for it. -- Bob Milutinovic Cognicom |
#17
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Følgende er skrevet af Bob Milutinovic:
Indeed, indeed. But just as I discovered when going through a similar procedure with a top-of-the-range Philips shaver in which the batteries had leaked (gotta love the old NiCd technology!), you'll likely find that the sum of the parts is worth a tenth of what they want for it. But all the people who test-shaved the guineapigs have to get paid too. -- Husk kørelys bagpå, hvis din bilfabrikant har taget den idiotiske beslutning at undlade det. |
#18
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On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 18:20:25 +0800, pedro wrote:
The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) The techo guy at the authorised Braun service centre tested my charger and confirmed it was dead as, so I purchased a replacement. He also asserted that they do not contain any smarts, and operate at line frequency. For the benefit of others who may find themselves in this position, the charger coil is driven at 72kHz unloaded, and this rises to 76kHz when charging the toothbrush. So much for line frequency! When I get a round tuit I may attack the dead unit with the trusty Dremel to see what exactly is inside. Thanks for all comments/suggestions. |
#19
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On Tue, 17 Dec 2013 17:00:20 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic"
wrote: "pedro" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 16 Dec 2013 18:47:33 +1100, "Bob Milutinovic" wrote: This morning I had a look at my daughter's newer unit, which has a slightly wedge-shaped oval as the docking point, and that seems to have considerably more bulk to the base unit - about an inch tall - which may likely house additional electronics. The one we have is like this (but with Oz-pins of course ...): http://www.service.braun.com/product/big_img.asp?artGrp=3731&partno=0067040173&l=GB&c=A U&pic=parts|xl|67040173_xl.jpg Well that's an entirely different kettle of fish; the ones I've seen have the male mating on the base. This is my daughter's charging base looks like; mine was similar but much thinner - http://www.thepartsbiz.com/assets/images/84848387b.jpg SWMBO's previous one(s) were like that style. I still contend though that because of the relatively low price of these units, it's not worth pursuing repair for any reason other than personal satisfaction. That's the current Plan A. $34 plus $10 shipping from east coast, or $39.95 ex the one local source. Then I can do a Jeff Liebermann learn-by-destroying job on the existing wall unit. Wedging a couple of flat-blades into the current one showed what appeared to be the end of a pcb and clear silicon bog filling the entire enclosure. There's something in there warranting a pcb, and enquiring minds (this one at least) feel a need to know. Indeed, indeed. But just as I discovered when going through a similar procedure with a top-of-the-range Philips shaver in which the batteries had leaked (gotta love the old NiCd technology!), you'll likely find that the sum of the parts is worth a tenth of what they want for it. If they can sell it in Oz for $34 then its probably $2 tops to the Chinese factory. That may buy all the parts (labour being inconsequential there, a bowl of rice per week) in their market but isn't going to dent the parts list here. Opening is for learning only. Not sure what I will find - electronics failed or the coil O/C. |
#20
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On Friday, December 13, 2013 5:20:25 AM UTC-5, pedro wrote:
The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) I have has some degree of luck with opening some sealed power supplies by putting them in the vise sort of crooked and slowly cranking the vise. Most of the time they'll eventually "pop" and crack open along the sealed halves.. Be careful with this as they sometimes pop with a lot of force. I've never tried this on a toothbrush base though. I'm sure they must be sealed a lot better than a power supply. But if you're "learning by destroying" then you have nothing to lose. Lenny |
#21
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On 18/12/2013 15:23, pedro wrote:
On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 18:20:25 +0800, pedro wrote: The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) The techo guy at the authorised Braun service centre tested my charger and confirmed it was dead as, so I purchased a replacement. He also asserted that they do not contain any smarts, and operate at line frequency. For the benefit of others who may find themselves in this position, the charger coil is driven at 72kHz unloaded, and this rises to 76kHz when charging the toothbrush. So much for line frequency! When I get a round tuit I may attack the dead unit with the trusty Dremel to see what exactly is inside. Thanks for all comments/suggestions. See this EEVBLOG for insides of Braun toothbrushes. It is not line frequency. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJgKfTW53uo Chris |
#22
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On Sat, 21 Dec 2013 15:11:33 +1100, Chris Jones
wrote: On 18/12/2013 15:23, pedro wrote: On Fri, 13 Dec 2013 18:20:25 +0800, pedro wrote: The Braun Triumph 3738 toothbrush and 3731 charger use an inductive coupling arrangement to charge the toothbrush battery. Right now SWMBO's unit isn't charging and I'm tasked with fixing it. Does anyone know if this operates at line frequency or something higher? (That will help sensing the field from the charging base to verify it is operational before I disassemble the toothbrush itself.) The techo guy at the authorised Braun service centre tested my charger and confirmed it was dead as, so I purchased a replacement. He also asserted that they do not contain any smarts, and operate at line frequency. For the benefit of others who may find themselves in this position, the charger coil is driven at 72kHz unloaded, and this rises to 76kHz when charging the toothbrush. So much for line frequency! When I get a round tuit I may attack the dead unit with the trusty Dremel to see what exactly is inside. Thanks for all comments/suggestions. See this EEVBLOG for insides of Braun toothbrushes. It is not line frequency. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJgKfTW53uo In case you hadn't noticed (in the post you replied to... ), I had advised that very fact. The one David is checking out is quite a different model, and in my case the charger was u/s which made the initial determination of frequency impossible. |
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