| Electronics > Repair |
| Help Repairing Weller WR3M Soldering Station |
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| deandadnaed:
Hi everyone! A couple of days ago I made a terrible mistake. I have a Weller WR3M soldering station. The air pump wasn’t working since I bought it. So I thought I could inspect what the problem was and solve it. However. I made a mistake and now the station doesn’t work at all. By mistake I plugged the Air Pump (24V CC) to the plugs in the board of the Vacuum Pump (12.5 V CC). After doing that the soldering station stopped working. Here are some images. Visual inspection reveals nothing wrong (I think). The fuse wasn’t blown. Nothing seems burned. Still it doesn’t turn on. When I plug it, and turn on the switch I hear a little buzz and that’s all. Any help is really appreciated. I really like this soldering station. It has been with me for a while and I really want to get it back working. Thank you! Enviado desde mi iPhone utilizando Tapatalk |
| mahi:
When you speak of the fuse, do you mean the primary fuse at the back of the unit or the 2 secondary fuses on the PCB (the brown and black thingies next to the big grey connector)? |
| deandadnaed:
The fuse I checked was the main one at the back of the unit. In this picture is right below the ground signal and the yellow/green cable. Enviado desde mi iPhone utilizando Tapatalk |
| deandadnaed:
How can I check the fuses on the PCB? It’s the one that says “MST T3 15A/250V” (black) and the other says “T1 6A/250V” (brown). Should I check them for continuity? Enviado desde mi iPhone utilizando Tapatalk |
| helius:
You can use your DMM in resistance mode and probe both ends of a fuse. If it reads below 1 ohm, it's good. Anything above that and the fuse is blown (there may be a path in the remainder of the circuit that provides a non-infinite resistance, but a working fuse is always less than 1 ohm, usually much less). |
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