My mom has a large but basic rice cooker that has knob which flips between a “warm” and “cook” setting. Recently, however, it stopped working, so it had to be fixed. Of course, I took that responsibility. To start, I took apart the cooker by unscrewing a metal plate underneath it to expose its internals. Inside the cooker was a relay to the mains, a switch connected to the knob and wires connecting to heating elements. The first thing I had to do was test out whether electricity was flowing into the system, so I plugged the cooker in and used a multimeter to check.
Rice cooker, which would have been discarded or at most recycled, is now back in circulation by replacing a small component - thermal fuse.
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Electricity was getting into the system, so that wasn’t the problem. I took apart the switch assembly, and there was a simple circuit board with LEDs on it. The circuits weren’t shorted out, and everything looked alright, so the last thing I could possibly do before calling it quits was to check the continuity for all connections.
Rice cooker, which would have been discarded or at most recycled, is now back in circulation by replacing a small component - thermal fuse.
x
Electricity was getting into the system, so that wasn’t the problem. I took apart the switch assembly, and there was a simple circuit board with LEDs on it. The circuits weren’t shorted out, and everything looked alright, so the last thing I could possibly do before calling it quits was to check the continuity for all connections.
I kept doing this and received only good results, until I checked a connection between the mains wire and an insulated wire connected to a circuit bridge. It didn’t give a sign of continuity, so I disconnected the insulated wire and found out that it was actually a fuse, or more specifically, a thermal cutoff. This component was designed to stop delivering a charge if the input voltage from the mains got too high in order to prevent the cooker from spontaneously combusting. It had a burn mark on one of its leads, so I took the entire component out and tested for continuity. Surprise surprise, it wasn’t a continuous connection, so I searched up the component on Amazon and found a 5-pack selling for 6 dollars, so it wouldn’t be a problem replacing it. After receiving the part, I installed the new cutoff and put the cooker back together. It works now, but it’s still waiting for usage.
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