View Single Post
  #8 (permalink)   Report Post  
Posted to rec.food.cooking
[email protected] penmart01@aol.com is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6,607
Default Troubleshooting Capresso Infinity grinder

On Sun, 4 Feb 2018 22:24:58 -0800 (PST), wrote:

>On Monday, June 26, 2017 at 12:24:51 AM UTC-4, sandv wrote:
>> Hello! We might have the same problem. Where did you find the microswitch? Couldn't find it anywhere. Thanks so much for your detailed description.
>>
>>
>> On Saturday, March 26, 2016 at 9:52:38 AM UTC-7, wrote:
>> > I'm sticking this here, because I could not find any instructions on
>> > the web, and google does a fair job of finding googlegroups posts.
>> >
>> > The Capresso Infinity grinder (Model 505) is the only motorized
>> > conical burr grinder under $100. Which is why its failure to function
>> > yesterday caused us consternation. Basic troubleshooting revealed
>> > a chunk of plastic had broken off the bean hopper. My beloved wife,
>> > who is the only one to use the grinder, claimed ignorance.
>> >
>> > I took off the grounds recipient, and, with the torx bits of my screwdriver,
>> > removed the lower burr, discovering impacted coffeegrounds underneath.
>> > Still did not spin. NB: the lower burr is pushed upwards by three balls
>> > atop three springs. Do not lose these.`
>> >
>> > How to remove the housing mystified me, but I found that it was held
>> > on by five tabs, which I could depress with an old butter knife,
>> > allowing me to slide the housing downwards.
>> > The power cord is connected to a terminal block, which in turn is connected
>> > to two blue wires. One blue wire goes to a microswitch, which is closed
>> > when the bean hopper is properly installed. From there, another blue wire
>> > leads to the grinding timer switch. From there, a white wire goes to
>> > a little circuit board with a MZ-23 PTC thermistor on it, and four diodes.
>> > Red and black wires from the motor go to this PCB.
>> >
>> > Measuring continuity with a VOM was not very fruitful, so I turned
>> > the timer switch to 10, plugged the grinder in, and manually closed
>> > the microswitch. Success! as the motor spun.
>> >
>> > Monday I will try to order a new bean hopper, and perhaps a new
>> > microswitch, direct from Capresso.

>
>hello i had a similar issue. I took apart the microswitch and added more material to the "nubin"
>with superglue and baking soda. heres how it looks first attempt.
https://photos.app.goo.gl/cvMS0NhcD3pjdqc13
>hope this helps anyone who sees this and cannot find a replacement microswitch.


For many years I futzed with roasting/grinding beans, and spent big
bucks on so called 'rare' beans plus mucho money on fancy shmancy
grinders and brewers... all for naught.
It's not possible to brew good coffee without good water... a few
years ago I installed a Reverse Osmosis water filter... what a
difference good water makes. Now I buy ground coffee in big cans for
cheap (Walmart Brand), makes fantastic brew, but it's really about the
H2O.... if you're using tap water you're masturbating. Bottled water
is tap water too, only from someone else's tap, probably from a garden
hose. And all those paper/charcoal element filters attached at the
sink spigot are no better than aquarium filters... will load up with
bacteria/viruses and make you very sick.
If you're a coffee and/or tea drinker you need an RO filter.