Fan Repair Technician Courses

| Fan Repair Technician Courses

I had accumulated three floor standing fans which had stopped rotating. Had cleaned and oiled its shaft bearings and even changed the squarish capacitor but still notturning. Was about to throw them away when I thought "... what's the harm in dissecting them, I could learn something from it...!!"I had asked a few servicemen and all I got was a short "...there's an internal thermal fuse...". I trawled the web for months but just could not find any info on where thefuse was and how to replace it. Finally I decided to sacrifice one of the fans and dissected all the wires going into the windings.

Thermal Fuse Replacement

To make fuse replacement easier, we need to free the motor from the control unit keeping its wiring harness as long as possible. The harness has 5 wires going intothe motor housing. By tracing this harness, starting from the motor housing, I found the Ground (green/yellow) and Neutral (blue) wires ending at a terminal block andanother three (grey, orange, red) ending at the speed selector.2. Remove the Ground and Neutral wire (no cutting required) from the terminal block. De-solder the grey, orange and red wires at the speed selector, note their locationfirst. (You may have noticed that I cut the whole harness about 10cm from the motor…big mistake...but that was way before I decided to do this!!) 3. Using a flat tip screw driver as a lever, pry the motor housing mount rod away from the control unit.4. Remove the oscillating unit and detach the capacitor.5. Remove the metal housing screws. Carefully remove the rotor and the windings slowly by giving it enough slack from the harness. 6. The windings are tied by strings and coated with some kind of lacquer. We need to cut some of them (see the “X” points in the picture) using pen-knife or sharp tipscissors. Look for a bulge (where the fuse is) and notice where it ends.7. Carefully slice open the black sheath cover to expose the brown woven sheaths, also tied with strings.8. Trace the blue Neutral wire from the harness towards the windings. You will notice it ended inside the biggest sheath which is on top. This is our target. Cut the stringstying this sheath.9. This big sheath, which is flattened, holds the fuse and another sheathed wire. Use fingers to lift it and press on its sides to form back its tubular shape.10. With wriggle, press and pull action, slowly remove this sheath and the thermal fuse will be exposed. Put the removed sheath aside to be reused later.11. Notice that one of the fuse’s leads is also sheathed to prevent electrical contact. Slice the SIDE of this sheath lengthwise about 10mm. Expose the lead through thiscut.12. With both leads exposed, cut them off as close to the fuse as possible. This will give us enough room to solder the new fuse.13. Trim the leads of the new fuse to about 10mm and tin them with solder.14. Solder the new fuse, polarity is not important but you may follow the old fuse direction.15. Move the cut sleeve to cover back the lead exposed in step #11above.16. Cover the fuse and its accompanying wire with the big sheath removed in step #10 above.17. String the new fuse assembly to the windings as neat as you can. Fold back the black cover and string again. Ensure no string or black cover sheath is protruding intothe rotor area.18. Carefully place back the windings and rotor into the motor housing.19. Secure the housing and mount back the oscillator and the capacitor.20. Insert the motor housing mount rod to the control unit, a little pressure is needed here.21. Dress back the wiring harness and reconnect the Ground and Neutral wires to the terminal block. (For me, I had to solder back all the wires and insulate them withheat shrinking tubes. I also had to de-activate the oscillator to prevent them from rubbing against each other)23. Re-solder the grey, orange and red wires back to the speed selector.24. Power on the fan to test. Cover back the control unit and you are done.

Troubleshooting the Thermal Fuse

1. Disconnect power to the fan.2. Open up the control unit cover.3. Take your time to trace the wiring and note down its color and location. It should be similar to the schematics above.4. Using the spare wire, connect from point “A” to “B” to shunt the fuse. For my case, “A” was the blue “neutral” wire on the terminal block and “B”, the grey wire onthe big squarish capacitor.Once done, make sure your fan (without the blades of course) is resting properly and securely as we are going to power it up.5. Connect and power up the fan motor. If the fuse is faulty, the motor will rotate, mine did. If it did not, it might also be that point “C” was used instead of “B”, since youcould not know which terminal it was. No worry.6. Disconnect power. Move point “C” to “B” and power up the fan again. If it still would not rotate, it’s likely the capacitor.7. Disconnect power and remove the spare wire

Replacing the Capacitor

Disconnect power.2. De-solder (or cut) the wires at capacitor terminals and connect them to a new capacitor (same type).3. Power up the fan. If the motor still refuses to rotate then I believe the problem is with the motor windings and it's time to say bye-bye to the fan

Finally

I did not use lacquer to protect the windings and its been operating for nearly 2 months now at around 6 hours a day.To prevent overheating, I modified the timer to disable the permanent "ON" selection. By using the timing mechanism there will be resting time in between, when no oneis in the room or no intention to use the fan for a while