My Wine Fridge Ate Its Fuse

DN Staff

July 30, 2012

2 Min Read
My Wine Fridge Ate Its Fuse

I was given a small, 12-bottle thermoelectric wine fridge from a friend who retrieved it from a metal recycler. It was a nice black countertop unit with a glass door and an LED temperature readout with controls at the top. My friend thought I would probably be interested in the solid-state cooling unit if it were still operational, so I checked it out.

The first thing I tried was to just plug it in and see if anything worked. There were no lights or fan. Maybe the main fuse was open? There wasn't a fuse anywhere on the outside. There were two on the switching power supply board.

I didn't relish digging into someone else's switching power supply if the main fuse was gone, and I decided I would give up if the fuse were missing. However, I found that the fuse had blown on the DC side of the supply. The fuse was soldered into the circuit board cordwood style with heat shrink over it, with one end sticking up in the air.

I dissected the fuse and found that it was a fast blow 3A fuse. I decided it was worth a shot, so I replaced the fuse with a new one. I was careful to not overheat the end of the fuse near the circuit board. The unit worked, but I was still wondering why the fuse blew. Was there was a condition that caused the unit to draw too much current?

I decided to monitor the current drawn by the fridge and discovered that the nominal draw was very close to the current rating of the fuse. Any design engineer knows to use a fuse rated at least 125 percent over the actual current. I installed a four-Amp fuse, and now the unit has worked for quite a while.

I got looking around and noticed that this same model had a lot of failures. I even found an identical broken one on Freecycle -- same problem. My friend and I now both have working wine fridges. All it cost was a bit of time and two new fuses.

This entry was submitted by Jack Gilmore and edited by Rob Spiegel.

Tell us your experiences with Monkey-designed products. Send stories to Rob Spiegel for Made by Monkeys.

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