A friend's remote doorbell has failed. This is the part that plugs into the wall and makes noise when the remote button is pressed. It's stone-cold dead. No indicator LED, nothing.
I popped it open and as you can see, it uses a capacitor power supply. I find full AC mains voltage across the big ceramic capacitor, but no voltage on the larger electrolytic. There's also no voltage on the zener, although there seems to be a coating that might be interfering and making it hard to connect my multimeter probes. I have not checked the voltages on the bridge rectifier M10S.
My question is, does this kind of supply fail in a predictable way? Is it common for the ceramic cap to fail, or the zener? I'm just trying to get a feel for whether it's worth trying to repair this thing. I guess I could put 12V onto the electrolytic and see if the rest fires up.

I popped it open and as you can see, it uses a capacitor power supply. I find full AC mains voltage across the big ceramic capacitor, but no voltage on the larger electrolytic. There's also no voltage on the zener, although there seems to be a coating that might be interfering and making it hard to connect my multimeter probes. I have not checked the voltages on the bridge rectifier M10S.
My question is, does this kind of supply fail in a predictable way? Is it common for the ceramic cap to fail, or the zener? I'm just trying to get a feel for whether it's worth trying to repair this thing. I guess I could put 12V onto the electrolytic and see if the rest fires up.

Attachments
-
296.6 KB Views: 11
-
381 KB Views: 11
-
260.7 KB Views: 11
-
331.7 KB Views: 11
Last edited: