S
sven
Hi, I am looking for a bit of advice on what may be causing the cooker hood circuit board to stop working.
In four weeks it has blown twice, at ÂŁ50 delivered a go. The hood is a Designair FGHD60ss,sealed ducting to outside, it is connected via moulded 13amp plug to socket in stainless steel chimney area(not exposed to moisture) connected to fan isolation switch, then to kitchen ring main. The ring main is protected by a 63a RCD. I believe that it is caused by the switching of the 45A cooker switch which is on an unprotected circuit. It seems to have blown the circuit board next time I tried to use the hood. Question is, is there something that could/should be inline to the cooker hood/45A cooker switch. I don't want to spend another ÂŁ50 for it just to go pop again. But I am also considering bypassing the circuit board and just using the fan isolation switch to turn it on and off, basically just having a single speed fan. It may just be the the cooker hood is of a poor design/reputation.
Any ideas would be helpful. sven
In four weeks it has blown twice, at ÂŁ50 delivered a go. The hood is a Designair FGHD60ss,sealed ducting to outside, it is connected via moulded 13amp plug to socket in stainless steel chimney area(not exposed to moisture) connected to fan isolation switch, then to kitchen ring main. The ring main is protected by a 63a RCD. I believe that it is caused by the switching of the 45A cooker switch which is on an unprotected circuit. It seems to have blown the circuit board next time I tried to use the hood. Question is, is there something that could/should be inline to the cooker hood/45A cooker switch. I don't want to spend another ÂŁ50 for it just to go pop again. But I am also considering bypassing the circuit board and just using the fan isolation switch to turn it on and off, basically just having a single speed fan. It may just be the the cooker hood is of a poor design/reputation.
Any ideas would be helpful. sven