OK, here we go. This beer tender has a thermo-electric cooling system. One morning when it was very quiet, I heard the fan cycling on and off repeatedly. I looked over and the Power LED would fully illuminate, flicker to a dim state, the fan would slow down, then the Power LED would illuminate to full brightness, the fan speed up, flicker to a dim state, etc. The cycle was less than 10 seconds. The green thermometer LED was not glowing meaning the beer was no longer cold.
I decided that I might as well take it apart to see if it was something simple. Yes, I defied what most would do and did not just throw it in the trash.
I disassembled it by removing four screws on the back. I found a black box that snapped open to reveal two circuit boards. One of medium complexity with an IC, three large heat sinks, several transformers, diodes, resistors, and capacitors. The other board was relatively simple.
I noticed, that the thermo-electric chip, fan, and both LED’s were wired to this small board. The only connection between the small board, and the “big” board was one connector labeled 12V.
I figured that the larger board was a fairly complex power supply. I unplugged the power supply and checked the voltage with a voltmeter. It read a steady 12 volts and change. Next, I plugged it in and again monitored the output voltage. Now the voltage would start at 12V then quickly drop to less than 2V, then fluctuate back to 12V, then to 2V repeatedly.
My guess was that the power supply board was bad, so I got a car battery charger and powered the small board. The beer tender worked great. So, I was right, the power supply had failed.
With only a voltmeter at hand, I started checking resistors, and diodes. I found that one capacitor did not show open, but had a resistance of 190 ohms. This looked wrong. I also noticed that the top was bulging. The top end usually blows, when they fail catastrophically, so this looked like a bad part.
I de-soldered the capacitor, then checked the resistance. It should be open or infinity, but it read 3.4 ohms, so I knew it was shorted. I found a 1000 microfarad capacitor at Radio Shack for $1.79, Same capacitance, but with a higher voltage capacity (35V versus 16V). I installed the new capacitor, and the beer tender now works like a charm.
So here’s what gets me disturbed, many household electronic goods are total pieces of shit. Everything I buy fails prematurely. And the expected repair is so expensive, that the logical course of repair is to 1) throw in garbage, and 2) buy new widget.
In my opinion, this is because everything we buy is from China. Why, because they make things for very low cost. You read the paper, how many times do people substitute cheap stuff in the process to save a penny? Cardboard in rolls you eat, cement in fake Tylenol, baby formula with no nutritional value.
Capacitors that SUCK! Dishwashers, washing machine, refrigerators, coffee makers, toys, etc. They all suck. Valve stems for tires that blow off causing instant deflation. My instant shade, the FIRST time I unzipped the zipper for the cover/case, it fell off.
Made in China, made to fail.
However, we design this stuff, and source it to China, then we buy it. It’s not really a Chinese problem, we are buying the Low Quality Goods perpetuating the problem.
BTW, I think the Krups Beer Tender is the same. From what I can tell, T-Fal doesn’t sell this replacement part. You can get the part from Krups for the low low price of $54. What a deal-o-rama!
For further information, the company that made the power supply is www.hanny.com.cn. Yeah baby, let’s buy some more crap from them.
Good thing I have en engineering degree and actually know what to do with it.
Board before repair:
After Repair:
Three Months Later: October 2011
FAILED AGAIN.
So this time, I removed the power supply and two different capacitors failed. These are larger 150 microfarad, 200V caps, so Radio Shack does not stock them. I found a pair on DigiKey for around $5 including shipping. In a few days, I'll remove those installed in China and we'll see if it works again. My eleven year old knows how to visually spot a blow capacitor from this project. At least I am raising his technical competence!
November 14, 2011
Here are the capacitors that failed in late
October.
Notice the
tops are sort of bulging or domed. Also,
take note of the black device that looks like a resistor standing somewhat
vertical at the nearest corner.
I received
the DigiKey caps, and soldered them in. I then connected the 120 VAC connector,
and the 12VDC connector to the sister cooling board to see if everything
worked. To my dismay, nothing worked. I thought that this time maybe something
more serious failed. I decided to waste a few more minutes. I verified that the
board was getting 120VAC. I also verified that 12VDC was not being delivered. I
decided to start at the 120VAC end of the board and look around. I thought that the next device just to the
left of the nearest corner in this photo was a transformer, so I checked the
voltage. Nothing. Since this is right
next to the 120 VAC source, I noticed that the little black disc capacitor and
the black device that looked like a resistor were in the path. The device
looked open, so I took a utility blade to cut the rubber sheathing. It was
shrink tube covering a fuse that had blown. I was going to fix this correctly
and maybe install a fuse holder, but I was impatient. I found a similar 2.5A
250V automotive fuse in the garage. I soldered leads on it to mimic the fuse on
the board. I soldered that in, and I now have cold beer and have thwarted the
design that was intended to make me send another few bucks to China by buying a
new Beer Tender to replace this POS.
Don’t buy
one of these, just keep some cold ones in the fridge!
Update November 29, 2013
Today, I attempted to extract the last little bit of beer out of a mini-keg and got not warm, but HOT beer. Since I had two previous power supply failures, I figured it had failed again.
However, the power supply was happily out putting 12.7 VDC. I noticed that the fan did not spin freely, and was not running. With a little pushing the shaft in and out, it would run, but not reliably. I Googled the part number, and found that these fans cost $20+. Even used fans on eBay were $10 with shipping. I decided to see if the fan could be fixed. Under the decal, there is a rubber plug that can be removed. Below that was a tiny split washer which I pried up with a small screw driver. This required some fiddling around, but I got it out. I then pushed out the fan and shaft. After adding something called Lock-Ease (lubricant with graphite), the fan works like new.
When removing the fan, I had to break the rubber retainers. I drilled some holes in the housing just above the fan and used wire tires to hold it in place. Then I used wire ties in the bottom holes to secure the bottom to the external vent grates on each side of the tender.
Cold beer is flowing again. I will publish this on a You Tube Video and place the title here, if you are interested.
Update November 29, 2013
Today, I attempted to extract the last little bit of beer out of a mini-keg and got not warm, but HOT beer. Since I had two previous power supply failures, I figured it had failed again.
However, the power supply was happily out putting 12.7 VDC. I noticed that the fan did not spin freely, and was not running. With a little pushing the shaft in and out, it would run, but not reliably. I Googled the part number, and found that these fans cost $20+. Even used fans on eBay were $10 with shipping. I decided to see if the fan could be fixed. Under the decal, there is a rubber plug that can be removed. Below that was a tiny split washer which I pried up with a small screw driver. This required some fiddling around, but I got it out. I then pushed out the fan and shaft. After adding something called Lock-Ease (lubricant with graphite), the fan works like new.
When removing the fan, I had to break the rubber retainers. I drilled some holes in the housing just above the fan and used wire tires to hold it in place. Then I used wire ties in the bottom holes to secure the bottom to the external vent grates on each side of the tender.
Cold beer is flowing again. I will publish this on a You Tube Video and place the title here, if you are interested.
I am an engineer as well with one of these beetender units. The power supply in these things is a piece of garbage. I had mine fail but not in the same way. Rather than spending hours trying to troubleshoot I just bought a 12 volt 6A 12VDC power supply off Amazon for 8 bucks. The unit pulls about 4amps so this is plenty enough power.
ReplyDeleteMaybe I'll try that. Three months later and it failed again. I will take it apart soon to see if I can determined what dies this time..
ReplyDeleteMy boss, an all-too-typical consumer, just threw away a similar product after only two years because it "stopped working". It is a Chefmaster HRT02WNCBB 1.7 cu. ft. mini-refrigerator. It is thermoelectric and uses a power supply surprisingly similar to your beer tender's - made by the same Chinese company whose website is www.hanny.com.cn (silk-screened on the PS PCB).
ReplyDeleteUnlike my boss, I repair ... or otherwise find alternate use ... for stuff being thrown out. A bit of searching on the interwebz and I found a replacement for the sizzling (!) power supply at www.repairclinic.com for a seemingly reasonable price of $16. I fret over spending too much money or time, so we mulled it over for an hour or so.
Since I already have multiple 120VAC refrigerators and a big freezer, we looked in another direction. By soldering new leads at the base of the Schottky diode, and removing the 120 VAC power cord, we now have the luxury of a 12 VDC battery-powered refrigerator in the truck when we go out to work on our unimproved future homestead.
Gawd I hate that goods have become so low quality. Sadly, folks seem to have lost the ability to distinguish between "low price" and "value". The future of society looks rather bleak to me, and your blog title highlights one symptom of it. I can only do so much, so I repair and repurpose as best as I can.
Take care; it was a pleasure reading your observations and experiences. Keep up your smart work please. ;)
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DeleteTurnandwalkaway, I know this was from 2012 but I just happened to come across your comment, in my quest/search for converting my thermoelectric fridge to 12VDC and was trying to figure out a way to bypass the onboard power supply- you've just renewed my hope that this is possible! Now if I could just figure out exactly which diode(s?) are the Schottky diode(s) on my board...
DeleteThanks guys for the entertainment - I needed the laughs. I was babysitting my grandsons tonight at their house - the one that i busted my ass for two years to make it better than anything I ever lived in. For the new kitchen, I bought two
ReplyDeleteKrup's Beertenders, one for myself and one for my son. I have been using mine pretty steady for two plus years. My son only about 6 keg's worth with delays in a finished kitchen.
Beertender doesn't turn on so I made the mistake of trying to find real tools at my son's house to try to fix this piece of crap. What he does with the tools I give him is a mystery. About 6 months ago, I gave him a multimeter since I have a collection of them. He gave it back because he had a 120v tester! Now I will take the unit to my house for a possible (?) fix. By the way, he left a full keg in the machine for several months. I'm trying to keep my grandkids closer to me after this whole experience. Tired of these cheap China products. They should give you two of anything you buy, just for parts.
Let us know if you get this fixed. Note that there is a fuse covered in black shrink tube soldered to the power supply board vertically. I replaced mine with a similar automotive fuse.
ReplyDeleteHi, I have two Krups Beertender and both unit will never stop cooling. I have tested the 12V it test good. I tested the TC in bottom of the unit and resistance changes. Im not sure what in the board turns the cooling part off and on. Any help would be great.
DeleteI swapped capacitors about a year ago since they were bulged but latest fixes didn't work so I just tore out the power supply and bought an $8 (1-4 amp) external power supply off of eBay. I hardwired it and it works great. I'm sure it doesn't hurt from a cooling perspective to have the power supply external to the unit.
ReplyDeleteAny chance of a tutorial in detail of how you did this?
Delete10 years later. I had the same issue, read here to use an external p/s. Made a video to help others. Hope someone can use it!
Deletehttps://youtu.be/kUekDTAXwkY?si=9UIwKoDtebR76s4n
Probably a smart idea to replace the power supply that is obviously junk. Mine is still going after two repairs. Wish I could buy more than New Castle and Heineken.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the info Tom and JM; I'll keep this in mind when my unit eventually fails.
DeleteOn a side note you can use other kegs with it if you buy the EdgeStar TBC50-ACC. It's a kit that EdgeStar sells for their units, but can be used on the BeerTender by drilling a hole in the side for the CO2 Line.
http://www.instructables.com/id/Krups-Beerteender-Conversion/
My BeerTender has never had New Castle or Heineken, but I'm enjoying a nice draft Bitburger as I type.
Cheers!
Can anyone explain in detail how to replace the power supply if yours is not fixable? Which replacement would you buy? Best/cheapest replacement? And if it does not fit the current board how would you wire it?
ReplyDeleteBasically the two red wires are in parallel, as are the two black wires going from the power supply to the cooling portion. They simply supply 12 Volts DC. I would probably try to find a connector at Radio Shack instead of soldering. Honestly, replacing the entire power supply for $10 would be easier than replacing the capacitors.
DeleteI appreciate the reply, I'm really hoping someone could make it super easy and say "buy this power adaptor (link), then plug these wires into here (pic maybe) and it will work".
DeleteHow about:
Deletehttp://www.amazon.com/Adapter-Power-Supply-LCD-Monitor/dp/B003TUMDWG/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1400365181&sr=8-1&keywords=12v+power+supply
Do you have a volt meter? If not purchase a $5 version off of Amazon or Harbor Freight. As delivered the center conductor is usually positive, the outer barrel negative. Cut off the connector and wire nut the positive lead to the red wire in the beer tender and the negative to the black. Determine positive and negative with the voltmeter. In fact, how do you know the power supply is bad?
I have a blown capacitor (bulged) and the fuse is blown.
DeleteA Coleman 120v AC to 12v DC Powerchill adapter can probably be cannibalized to fit inside the Krups.
ReplyDeleteJust got one as a Christmas gift. For my luck, there no kegs in Brazil this month, because of Heineken´s importing issues, and i could read several tips on the use of the beertender before using it.
ReplyDeleteLot´s of consumers critics in Brazil, because this is not a product to use in tropical environments. But i live in the south of Brazil (Curitiba, state of ParanĂ¡), and the temperatures here are lower then the rest of the country.
Anyway, thanks for the alert on the low quality of the power supply and other cooling components of the Beertender.
After i use it, i´ll post my impressions on the product.
Hi, I have two Krusp Beertender and both unit will never stop cooling. I have tested the 12V it test good. I tested the TC in bottom of the unit and resistance chnages. Im not sure what in the board turns the cooling part off and on. Any help would be great.
DeleteSorry Krups beertenders
DeleteI have to say that Tom isn't much of an engineer if he didn't know that the resistor thing was a fuse!
ReplyDeleteThanks Bro, I usually don't cover (hide) fuses with heat shrink tubing.
Deletedoes anyone have a schematic of the power supply?
ReplyDeleteHere is a video I made after reading the posts here. Thanks for the tips on the external power supply! I’m back in business!!
ReplyDeletehttps://youtu.be/kUekDTAXwkY?si=9UIwKoDtebR76s4n