chrisb8
Landlord.
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2019
- Messages
- 692
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- 509
Hi all,
When using my klarstein kettle last night it started smoking and giving off an acrid smell. Brew day over so I emptied the water out, unscrewed the base and had a look inside. It appears that the wiring to/from the timer has melted, I assume this means it has overheated by overloading? I wasn't using it any differently to usual, it hadn't been stored differently, hadn't been dropped etc. I don't even use the timer, it's in the permanently on position. It's about 3 years old and it gets used on average once a month. I take it that is the end for that particular kettle...
I would be really appreciative if someone with some electrical expertise could suggest why this would have happened? Anything I could do to help prevent this happening again? The reason being that I often use the kettle on a timer to pre-heat my sparge water and it's worrying if this could have caused a fire if I hadn't been there to quickly shut it off.
I took a picture of the wiring.
When using my klarstein kettle last night it started smoking and giving off an acrid smell. Brew day over so I emptied the water out, unscrewed the base and had a look inside. It appears that the wiring to/from the timer has melted, I assume this means it has overheated by overloading? I wasn't using it any differently to usual, it hadn't been stored differently, hadn't been dropped etc. I don't even use the timer, it's in the permanently on position. It's about 3 years old and it gets used on average once a month. I take it that is the end for that particular kettle...
I would be really appreciative if someone with some electrical expertise could suggest why this would have happened? Anything I could do to help prevent this happening again? The reason being that I often use the kettle on a timer to pre-heat my sparge water and it's worrying if this could have caused a fire if I hadn't been there to quickly shut it off.
I took a picture of the wiring.
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