D
Deleted member 191766
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What intrigues me is that the C&K switch is rated at 200mA DC and the E-switch (which I avoided) is rated at 300mA DC
Seems the unit boots at 250mA and runs at 500mA
This may not be of any relevance as what was failing was the mechanical part of the switch and not electrical, although one might argue that with too much current the switch itself might be getting hot.
It may be only the N66U and AC66U that use this switch
What worries me is this guy who has seem 3 failures on 3 units
The problem here is that the switch does not break with use, but just sitting there (that is how this thread began), so even if you only use it 3 times there still may be an issue.
The unit consumes at least $10 of electricity a year, so a $7 switch seemed like a good investment to be sure it would not just turn itself off.
Seems the unit boots at 250mA and runs at 500mA
This may not be of any relevance as what was failing was the mechanical part of the switch and not electrical, although one might argue that with too much current the switch itself might be getting hot.
It may be only the N66U and AC66U that use this switch
Broken power button
Man I joined the club about a year and a half ago on my AC66U. Now there's a nut and electrical tape holding it down Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
www.snbforums.com
What worries me is this guy who has seem 3 failures on 3 units
Broken power button
Plugging & unplugging coaxial plugs is lame. The other end of the cord works too. It is really such a small challenge to reach it since I need it only every few months.
www.snbforums.com
The problem here is that the switch does not break with use, but just sitting there (that is how this thread began), so even if you only use it 3 times there still may be an issue.
The unit consumes at least $10 of electricity a year, so a $7 switch seemed like a good investment to be sure it would not just turn itself off.
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