I bought one from eBay, and the seller sent me another one that said "not working" with a note saying that no one had bid on it and it was mine to tinker.
Well, the not working timer did work, as long as the start/reset bar was pushed.
Since I had nothing to lose, I asked my neighbor (retired electronic engineer) what could be wrong and he told me to open it and look at the board
Peeling the rubber feet gave me access to 4 screws in the back, and then had to do a bit of coaxing to remove the front dials and this showed up:
Gralab 450 Board - built as a tank
His recommendation was to look in this order
1 Start/Reset switch (corrosion due to humid environment)
2 Capacitors (useful life)
3 Ribbon cable (broken)
4 Voltage regulator (broken)
I ruled out 3 and 4 because the timer-panel was doing what it was supposed to
I started on (1); which seemed the more logical one. I guessed it needed a good contact cleaner treatment (spray, actuate, spray, actuate) . Tested and that seemed to do the trick.
Just in case I also cleaned all the other contacts, and measured the capacitors (2) which seem ok for now but expect to replace them in 3-5 years as they naturally lose the electrolyte liquid inside of them.
So now I have 2 working timers.
GRALAB 450 - Repair
Re: GRALAB 450 - Repair
Well done!
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- http://www.flickriver.com/photos/flipfl ... teresting/ (Flickr's calculation of my "most interesting" pics);
- http://www.flickr.com/photos/flipflik/s ... 879115542/ (what I like best).
Re: GRALAB 450 - Repair
Good work! Electrolytic capacitors will last a lot longer if they are kept polarised, i.e. under voltage. Be sure to turn the timers on every now and then.
Re: GRALAB 450 - Repair
Another lesson learned, when replacing the enlarger bulb for LED use a dimmable one!
Non dimmable ones flicker when they should be off (Its time to replace all the capacitors) dimmable ones don't
Non dimmable ones flicker when they should be off (Its time to replace all the capacitors) dimmable ones don't
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