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Amica KMI13314E - induction hob error E6

kolin4 52632 8
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Treść została przetłumaczona polish » english Zobacz oryginalną wersję tematu
  • #1 15714427
    kolin4
    Level 9  
    Hello

    I have Amica KMI13314 induction. Today I connected it to 230V. Everything went well, the induction fired and started working, I turned up the power to check how quickly the water boiled ... flash, bang and blown fuse.

    I have read that the board, when connected to 230V, needs a fuse of at least 30A, my standard 16A.

    I turned on the fuse and now only two burners are working (I do not give more power because I have to change the fuse), and the other two after turning on show error E6 I searched the net, found some Amica instructions and according to her, this error means the board overheating (wait and turn on). Obviously, this method doesn't work,
    concludes that some temp control has fallen and does not allow the disc to be turned on.

    Anyone have any ideas what to do with it and where to look for the problem?

    greetings
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  • #2 15714856
    Piotr2608

    Level 41  
    In my opinion - the power module has been damaged.
    It was connected to a voltage of 230V - does it mean that it previously worked under a different voltage?
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  • #3 15714861
    kolin4
    Level 9  
    The board can work both under 400V and 230V. I connected it for the first time. The bank connection is well done
  • #4 15719885
    kolin4
    Level 9  
    I dismantled the disc, it must have been overvoltage and I fried the paths in the module in the photo. What is this module called professionally or where to look for it?
    I will add that the power supply is connected to this module.
    Amica KMI13314E - induction hob error E6 Amica KMI13314E - induction hob error E6
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  • #5 15754842
    kolin4
    Level 9  
    Burned tracks bridged, the plate still blows fuses on two burners. I figured out that there was also a triac, unfortunately there is no such in Poland, so I'm waiting for a package from China. The topic turned into a monologue, but maybe it will be useful to someone.
  • #6 15755987
    Loker
    Level 39  
    The tracks are burned, because you probably have a short circuit on some IGBT transistor. In addition, the rectifier bridge probably went - read about the damage to the induction plates, there is some of it on the Electrode.
    What a triac? Is there any triac at all?
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  • #7 18826796
    skopek
    Level 15  
    You need to repair the tracks in the filter and replace the damaged IGBTs. Attention. Replacements sold on AliExpress have 1/3 less power despite the same marking and are damaged after a month. I ordered 10 pieces and two have already died and it is today one with an error E6 on the 1400W field, and earlier after an hour on the 3000W field. IGBT damage in Amica boards with the geko module is damaged due to poor heat dissipation. One heat sink for two bridges and four IGBTs. They should hang the eggs from the producer for deliberate action aimed at damaging the equipment. There are two huge heat sinks in the old Zelmer record and the plate worked all day, cooking on 4 fields only the wife put a huge enamel pot full of beets and it broke in half :-(
  • #8 19157728
    arek201286
    Level 10  
    Did the author manage to fix it?
  • #9 19157836
    skopek
    Level 15  
    In mine, I repaired the paths in the filter and replaced the damaged IGBT with the original Infineon IHW30N110R3 purchased from TME. Works until today.

Topic summary

The discussion revolves around an Amica KMI13314 induction hob that experienced an E6 error after being connected to a 230V supply, which caused a blown fuse. The user suspects damage to the power module due to overvoltage and has identified burned tracks on the circuit board. Responses indicate that the issue may involve damaged IGBT transistors and a rectifier bridge, with suggestions to repair the circuit paths and replace faulty components. One user successfully repaired their unit by replacing damaged IGBTs with original parts, while others noted the poor quality of replacements from AliExpress. The conversation highlights the importance of proper heat dissipation in induction hobs to prevent similar failures.
Summary generated by the language model.
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