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Help diagnose blown input battery charger

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bigjoncoop:
I just purchased a top of the line AIMS POWER 36v / 48v Battery Charger from eBay that was listed as "untested but brand new" for only $50!

AIMS POWER: CON120AC3648VDC

Unfortunately when I received it I noticed some small signs of use and that some of the case screws were stripped out! So I decided to open it up first to make sure all was well and I'm glad I did....

The 120v mains input side has been blown up. I will post pictures below.

The input fuse is completely burned up. Immediately next to that is a large thyrister and 2 large input filtering capacitors I believe, that are slightly blackened but may just shmoo from the blown fuse... Maybe.

*** also I noticed on the output of the charger there is a black short circuit mark on the negative screw terminal, and the positive terminal screw is completely missing....

So possibly the output was accidentally shorted together, but would that cause the input to burn like that?

Other than that there is no noticeable damage anywhere else. All the other components look fine as well as the PCB.

There's a large Bank of N-Channel mosfets, I'm going to start checking each one to make sure they're not blown...

There is currently NO short on the input or on the or output.

If anybody could please help with any advice on what I need to start checking, how to confirm it's safe to replace the input fuse and try to power it back up, etc...

I appreciate your help! This is a $400 battery charger and if I could get it up and running that would be fantastic.



soldar:
How about you reject it and return it?

bdunham7:
I would jump the fuse and if it works, great.  If not, eBay money-back guarantee for "not as described".

That said, you really have to wonder what happened to that fuse...

bigjoncoop:

--- Quote from: bdunham7 on January 04, 2024, 04:03:41 pm ---I would jump the fuse and if it works, great.  If not, eBay money-back guarantee for "not as described".

That said, you really have to wonder what happened to that fuse...

--- End quote ---

--- Quote from: soldar on January 04, 2024, 03:58:31 pm ---How about you reject it and return it?

--- End quote ---

I can't really return it because it was sold as "untested"... granted I could really push the issue and probably get my money back.

But for the price that I purchased it for I'd be crazy to return it instead of just fixing it. I bought it to resell most likely.

So it's obvious it could be fixed probably less than I paid for it so let's say I'm all in and $100. It's worth $400

tom66:

--- Quote from: bdunham7 on January 04, 2024, 04:03:41 pm ---I would jump the fuse and if it works, great.  If not, eBay money-back guarantee for "not as described".

That said, you really have to wonder what happened to that fuse...

--- End quote ---

A fuse failure like that looks very aggressive, not just e.g. too many inrush cycles.  I'd check for AC side shorts which can hide behind the bridge rectifier before applying power.

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