I was given two Amcor TC-120 Dehumidifiers a while ago by a neighbour who was moving house. One was full of grass seed and the other was covered in oil but they cleaned up nicely and worked well for about 6 months. Now both appear to have developed a fault.
When turned on, they emit an audible CLICK and then visibly SHUDDER. This click-shudder sequence then repeats. The one I've used most does this about 150 times a minute to start with. The lesser used one only around 60 times a minute. I've stopped using them because of this problem but if I do leave them on long enough, the click-shudder behaviour slows and stops. Achieving normal operation might take anywhere from 2 to 15 minutes.
While the click-shudder is at its most intense, the dehumidifier draws up to 700W (measured with a plug-in power meter). The information placard on the back of the machine states power and current (at 240V) is 230W and 1.3A. After the click-shudder stops, power draw reduces to 18W and it appears to be working normally judging by the frost building up on the refrigeration coils.
I have no previous experience with dehumidifiers. Does anyone recognise this behaviour as a particular dehumidifer failure mode? Googling brings up very little of use about this model. About the only useful thing I've found is here
http://www.fixya.com/support/t15686809-amcor_dehumidifer_tc120_circuit_board with the relevant bit being
It is not your relay. Mine did the same and the problem is the resistor that drive it goes short so the relay clatters as the circuit is trying to control it. The actual fault is the 78p153sp driver. You can change the transistor, a pnp will do the trick but the driver is dead. I'm currently looking for this IC and they're hard to find, cheap Chinese tat. So instead I'll likely fit a temp sensor that detects when the cooling coils reach about 4deg and switch the fridge off because shorting the relay will just cause the cooling to stay on and you'll get ice, it needs to cool, collect moisture, switch off, warm up and dump the moisture...crude but it works. This unit is worth saving.
Does anyone have any advice or insight before I start trying to disassemble it?
thanks,
Richard