geoffff
Observer
I was messing around with my door panel where I have an sPOD SourceLT switch panel installed, and I somehow managed to short a switch control wire against the door panel. (The door metal has a nasty jagged cutout for this switch panel.) I didn't notice anything was wrong until my air compressor started switching on and off randomly, and I smelled smoke.
Looks like I thoroughly fried the RJ45 connector where the switch wires go into my sPod, and melted the circuit board around it. It's too complicated for me to fix myself, as it's a multi-layer board. I called sPod and they want me to send my unit in for repair.
It's a little ironic to me that this can happen. I thought the whole point of the sPod was that it allows low-current wired switches to remotely activate high-current appliances! There must have been some significant current going to my switches - in order to burn out the connector like that!
Yes, there's a 2-amp fuse for the whole sPod unit (it didn't blow), but there are no fuses on the control lines to the switches.
This could have cause a fire!
Looks like I thoroughly fried the RJ45 connector where the switch wires go into my sPod, and melted the circuit board around it. It's too complicated for me to fix myself, as it's a multi-layer board. I called sPod and they want me to send my unit in for repair.
It's a little ironic to me that this can happen. I thought the whole point of the sPod was that it allows low-current wired switches to remotely activate high-current appliances! There must have been some significant current going to my switches - in order to burn out the connector like that!
Yes, there's a 2-amp fuse for the whole sPod unit (it didn't blow), but there are no fuses on the control lines to the switches.
This could have cause a fire!