Everything you've sent helped.
I am a retired marine engineer, so I have experience in electrical/mechanical operations. I do have a schematic that is inside the module cover. Unfortunately it is not printed, just made out of molded plastic, the same color of the cover so it's very difficult to read. With your help and a magnifying glass I am able to see the circuit.
I have run the unit during the day when I can watch it, don't want to have to clean up water all the time. The unit was acting a little erratic. None of the components have failed completely. The cam is intact, the water, hold and feeler arm switches do function, however, certainly one of them has been hanging up a bit since this repair began.
I have observed the gear that turns the ejector.Each full turn of the gear is what I refer to as a cycle. Yesterday and the day before the unit would cycle anywhere from 3,4, or even once 5 times before the motor would shut down. Of course when it cycled 4 or 5 times the water fill valve would keep admitting water, thus the overflow. I turned the water adjusting screw two complete turns in to reduce the amount of water for each cycle. This stopped the overflow. Continuing to observe the operation I have increased the water flow 1/2 turn.I've done this twice so far. The unit started cycling 3 times before shutting down, so still no overflow, but the cubes were smaller than desired (of course). Today I have observed three operations and each time it is cycling twice and shutting down. I believe the unit must cycle at least twice, as opposed to once, because one cycle only gets the cubes out of the mold and sitting on top of the ice maker. It's the second cycle that actually dumps the ice from the top of the unit into the bin. I am still one full turn from where the ice cube size adjustment was when I started. If the unit continues to cycle two revolutions per operation I believe I'll be able to increase the cube size back to normal.
Combining everything you have told me, looking at the schematic, and my own experience, it is my belief that the culprit has been the (motor) hold switch. I believe it was hanging up, keeping the motor turning even though the thermostat switch has opened. I feel it was the hold switch as opposed to the thermostat because I believe the heater element has shut down, which the thermostat opening would also cause.
So, like I said before we will get this. Every day has brought more progress. And, by the way, even with all that watercoming in, the silicone seal has worked great. No drip down the back that caused icecycles and eventually caused the auger to bind up due to the accumulation of ice.
My continued thanks for your help and perseverence. I know that all this work is for my ice maker, not yours, but I also know as an engineer, there is a certain amount of professional pride in getting it done that drives us.
I'll keep you posted on the progress.