Guest
While having some electrical work done, my toaster oven blew out.
Looking inside, I found that the two parts that have burned up are the
line on the PCB that's marked as the "fuse" as well as the component
that sits between the two AC inputs in a spot labeled "ZNR".
I verified that the fuse is broken and to test functionality, I
shorted it with a piece of wire. Sure enough, the toaster oven was
working.
I don't want to work without a fuse, so I'm thinking of putting a 10A
fuse (for 1200W) in that place. However, the way I understand is, to
regulate the power correctly, I need to choose the right component to
go into the "ZNR" spot. I cannot tell on my PCB because that
component melted/blew up.
Can you please take a look at your board and tell me what the "ZNR"
component is, and also, feel free to add comments/suggestions about
that fuse?
Thanks,
-Michael
Looking inside, I found that the two parts that have burned up are the
line on the PCB that's marked as the "fuse" as well as the component
that sits between the two AC inputs in a spot labeled "ZNR".
I verified that the fuse is broken and to test functionality, I
shorted it with a piece of wire. Sure enough, the toaster oven was
working.
I don't want to work without a fuse, so I'm thinking of putting a 10A
fuse (for 1200W) in that place. However, the way I understand is, to
regulate the power correctly, I need to choose the right component to
go into the "ZNR" spot. I cannot tell on my PCB because that
component melted/blew up.
Can you please take a look at your board and tell me what the "ZNR"
component is, and also, feel free to add comments/suggestions about
that fuse?
Thanks,
-Michael