Thanks for the video - wish i'd seen it last time clock was replaced. - I knew it could be bypassed but wasnt sure which wires. All done - repaired and this achilles heel is now gone. Thanks again from New Zealand.
Thanks for the video, just sorted my oven out for free. I can only assume the 9 dislikes are from SMEG engineers who would have liked to charge me for a repair.
Thanks a lot, bokicar1 :) This year, italian GDP will be reduced £300 (one less new oven sold), but personally I will be richer, because I can still use my old 17 years old good oven !
For people who was lost like me, the aim is to ground the white wire going to the rotary switch permanently instead of allowing the clock to do it via 1 and a1. If OP took 2mins to write that up my dinner wouldn't be 30mins late.
In my White-Westinghouse ("Stainless Steel Oven" 05~203105) oven, which has exactly the same timer, it was easiest to connect the white (live) cable directly to the function selection switch. No soldering required, just pull the connector off the relay and push it on where the wire from the relay went to the switch. I taped up the disused connectors and cable tied the wires to keep them out of trouble, and put black tape over the dead display and where the deceased buttons used to be so it looks neat.
i have a Kenwood the wire Purple and red at the end what i did i swapped them round and it started flashing saved me £75 then turned the back round take Picture before you take any wires apart. Thank you.
Sorry mate, i was trying to work it out my self how to hot-wire it. Timer has a relay and the idea was to bridge that replay. I can only advise new oven then or a Smeg engineer
Thanks for the video - wish i'd seen it last time clock was replaced. - I knew it could be bypassed but wasnt sure which wires. All done - repaired and this achilles heel is now gone. Thanks again from New Zealand.
Thanks, this video saved me a lot of money buying a replacement part.
Thanks for the video, just sorted my oven out for free. I can only assume the 9 dislikes are from SMEG engineers who would have liked to charge me for a repair.
Glad it was of help. If it only helped one person it's worth it no meter how many dislikes.
Thanks a lot, bokicar1 :)
This year, italian GDP will be reduced £300 (one less new oven sold), but personally I will be richer, because I can still use my old 17 years old good oven !
For people who was lost like me, the aim is to ground the white wire going to the rotary switch permanently instead of allowing the clock to do it via 1 and a1. If OP took 2mins to write that up my dinner wouldn't be 30mins late.
It worked for me, thank you! The timer is off but it's ok.
Thanks I had to short the two red wires also, just the white ones gave me heat but no fan. Saved me estimated $600!
In my White-Westinghouse ("Stainless Steel Oven" 05~203105) oven, which has exactly the same timer, it was easiest to connect the white (live) cable directly to the function selection switch. No soldering required, just pull the connector off the relay and push it on where the wire from the relay went to the switch. I taped up the disused connectors and cable tied the wires to keep them out of trouble, and put black tape over the dead display and where the deceased buttons used to be so it looks neat.
i have a Kenwood the wire Purple and red at the end what i did i swapped them round and it started flashing saved me £75 then turned the back round take Picture before you take any wires apart.
Thank you.
Sorry, not able to follow this at all.
Sorry mate, i was trying to work it out my self how to hot-wire it. Timer has a relay and the idea was to bridge that replay. I can only advise new oven then or a Smeg engineer
Totally useless clip.....nothing worth here!