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Joined: 10/27/2012(UTC) Posts: 1
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The motor of this 2004 Urbina Wine Cooler is suddenly much louder than it used to be. One of the fans is loud, the other running smooth and quiet. I've removed all the dust from it, but its still making noise. Any suggestions? This happen to anyone?
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Rank: Advanced Member
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Joined: 2/29/2008(UTC) Posts: 19,638
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I cannot find any info on this unit. A model number may help but I doubt it.
If it is a metal blade fan check that the blades are OK (nothing bent out of shape) If OK you could try a drop of oil on the fan's bearings. Use 3in1 or sewing machine oil, do not use WD40 as that is not a very good lubricant.
If that does nothing replace the fan. |
THIS FORUM IS DEAD!!!!!!! |
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Joined: 6/16/2017(UTC) Posts: 1
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I (foolishly or foolheartedly) undertook the project of repairing a (Peltier) wine cooler. It looked so simple. One power supply and one thermoelectric device. I spent all those college years becoming an electrical engineer. Too bad I overlooked the wisdom thing.
With the back off, I noted lots of obstruction of air flow. Dust and gook had plugged up the hot side of the heat exchanger. Upon inspection, the power supply circuit board suffered dark discoloration around the heat sinks of the power control devices. The muffin fans were fine. The fuse was blown.
So I googled the wine cooler make and model and read about a lot of anguish and a couple lucky results. I tracked down the references to other blogs and forums using the circuit board manufacturer (Foshan Hanyi). The wisest suggestion was to examine my budget and see if I couldn't find the capital for a whole new cooler. I'm not yet wise, so I moved on to option 2: Find exact replacement parts. The 'manufacturer' has long since disappeared and no second source could be found. Option 3: buy replacement parts to include: all the electrolytic caps and all the power control devices. Did that. Then looked for other failed parts. One 2.0 ohm resistor (replaced both) and one fuse (replaced). Better...I got 5 to 6 Vdc out to the Peltier, but things are not getting cold.
So far, I'm in for about $50. I can't find the probes for my O-scope. Its tough to track down a switching supply without a scope. I went back to google. and visited many wine cooler support pages, those still in business, that is. Finally, I got lucky. I went to Haier support page (haier.encompasss.com) and they showed pictures of their replacement power supplies. After all the time I spent with the soldering iron, I recognized the picture: (almost) an exact replacement. Only a few detail differences in the thermal control area. P/N RF-5210-20. $41 delivered. High five.
The only other possible failure item was the Peltier device itself. Yup, it too, had failed (measured 3 ohms but refused to get hot/cold). I got on NEWEGG and found said devices very reasonable if I didn't mind waiting several weeks. They come from China (THZY), so I'm pretty sure they are OEM. I ordered two 12706's. When I opened the heat exchanger, I saw a 12705 part number and the device was 50mm x 50mm (x 5mm thick). The ones I had (12706) were 40mm x 40mm (x 3.8mm thick). Whoops! It might have helped if I had cracked open the heat exchanger before ordering. I went to Amazon (better spec data) and found that the part number did not determine the physical size. My lesson here is to shop by voltage, wattage AND size.
Well, as you have already guessed, I put the smaller device in as a replacement. Lots of grease and screwed it down real tight. It's the thickness of the device thats critical. If you think about it, the wattage of the device only determines how long it will take to chill one bottle or however many you put in the cabinet at a time.
Final tidbit of wisdom: Only put the thermal grease on one side of the device. Then insure you have the cold side facing in and the hot side facing out. Then go put the thermal grease on both sides. I mistakenly thought there was some convention for which side is which, like 'part number marks the hot side' or 'part number marks the cold side'. Not so. I know, I know, it's a 50-50 shot and when I got it wrong, I could have just exchanged the wires. But there's just something wrong about a red negative lead and a black positive lead.
My wine is now cool. Life is good again. If it runs continously for the rest of its (or my) life, its still less than a light bulb.
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