
Hello, to test the timer, it has a voltage of 1 and 3, that is 220 volts, if it is running, the compressor must have 220 volts between 1 and 4.
Then he takes out the 220 volts, turns with a screwdriver until it defrosts, connects 220 volts and there must be a voltage between 1 and 2 leaves 40 'and the compressor has to enter again (voltage between 1 and 4).
Hello triathlon 99, thanks for responding, effectively and as I commented, when connecting the timer there is voltage 220v on lines 1 and 3 and also on lines 1 and 4, and the refrigerator works well. when turning to thaw the tension I have it between pins 1 and 2, I have waited more than 1 hour and the clock does not turn, the timer is the same factory since I buy it in the brand.
hello fermin 007, thanks for answering, if it's the same, buy it at the refrigerator brand and it's the same. regards
Good morning, then you say that you connect it and if there is 220vac both in the supply of the motor and for the compressor and you turn it so that it defrosts and the compressor does not enter again? turn on the resistance? I mean it heats up? and then the timer does not advance again? check the bimetal, it may be activated, that is to say continuity, in some systems, the bimetal should be opened, so that the timer's motor, rotate again and pass the plates so that the compressor enters again, check the bimetal, regards
If the problem goes there, I was reading and of course, it can be bimetal or thermal fuse. one of those two is giving problem, since this refrigerator brings a special timer I will see if I can upload the connection diagram thanks
And because until I tell you what it can be, then answer the other colleague and give him the solution? let's be serious, greetings
Hello Fermín 007, it happens that before you answered me the other colleague had already sent me the link and when reading I discovered the request, I feel that you feel passed to take thanks and excuse me
If my dear Climate, but it happens that you edited the query and changed the version, first you said that you forced the thaw, said in other words you turned manually and that if I heat the resistance, therefore the thermo - fuse was good, the resistance and the bimetal, but beware, you mentioned that a lot of time passed and the timer did not work, if you look, I then mentioned that if the bimetal stays stuck, the compressor does not enter again, then what you mentioned to you happened to you colleague TRIATON
Climate answers this: Hello triathlon 99, thanks for responding, effectively and as I commented, when connecting the timer there is voltage 220v on lines 1 and 3 and also on lines 1 and 4, and the refrigerator works well. when turning to thaw the tension I have it between pins 1 and 2, I have waited more than 1 hour and the clock does not turn, the timer is the same factory since I buy it in the brand.
In your ORIGINAL consultation you said that if it warmed the resistance, but hey, the important thing is that you already solved, greetings