How to fix a broken Air Still

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 18 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 6

  • @oxideblitz7283
    @oxideblitz7283 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Legend, thankyou heaps for this video.
    So that reset switch on the still, does it click out like it would on a power board ?

    • @brewingadvice
      @brewingadvice  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hi @oxideblitz7283. Yes and no. Yes, it does click out so to reset it you need to push it in, but you probably won't visually be able to see any real difference is the switch. It won't be that you can walk past it and notice that it has tripped. When the switch needs to be reset, you only push it in a few mm, so it isn't that profound.

    • @oxideblitz7283
      @oxideblitz7283 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@brewingadviceAh okay, I'm trying to find a new thermostat just struggling to find the specific one lol my air still after about 45 mins of use throws out the house power

    • @brewingadvice
      @brewingadvice  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@oxideblitz7283 the thermostat shouldn't be the item that is causing the issue. The thermostat is just a switch that allows electricity to flow to the heating coil. If the thermostat gets too hot it will trip and electricity will stop flowing. A standard kitchen kettle works in the same way and has the same type of thermostat in it (all be-it slightly different size and temperature rating). The only difference is the kettle will auto-reset itself once the temperature goes below a set point. The Air Still needs to be manually reset (for safety). So, if you switch to a new thermostat, I don't think it will help you.

    • @lauragreen49
      @lauragreen49 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Glad I read the comments. I turn on my still, the fan turns on then it blows the fuse on the switchboard. I Intially thought it was the element. Watching your video I thought it could have been the thermostat as there is some staining on it.
      Do you think it's worth getting a new thermostat?

    • @brewingadvice
      @brewingadvice  8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Hi @@lauragreen49. Sadly it is difficult to say, it depends what is tripping. Most Consumer Units (Fuse Boxes, or Switchboards) use several MCD trips under a single RCD trip. An MCD will trip if it detects that the Line (Live) and Neutral have touched. An RCD measures the outgoing new electricity and the used incoming electricity. If it detects that the in and out are different (meaning something is absorbing the electricity, like a human), it will trip. It is possible that a faulty switch (like the thermostat) is allowing the electricity to ark across it, so this could cause a trip. Another part is the Thermal Fuse, but these blow like the fuse in a plug, so these don't really cause an issue. It is also possible that the heating element itself is causing the issue.