My drip maker shuts off. This is very frustrating, since no human should attempt the consumption of six cups of coffee within thirty minutes.

I’d like to get rid of this timer, but I can’t see anything obvious on the board. Is it most likely to be in that little processor at the top left of the coated side?

lmao some of these replies are exactly the sort of thing you’d expect from reddit in like, 2011. For reference, even mildly scalded coffee tastes better than that instant shite, and I’m not drinking ut for taste.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    This is what I would do if I’m dedicated enough to this laziness and didn’t care about starting a fire in my house:

    • The switching voltage is 12V I assume from the datasheet and model number. I’d measure the voltage of the relay (the biggest black box) on the lower side with a multimeter when on if I want to be sure.
    • I’d disconnect the positive end of the low side of the relay.
    • I’d attach it to a SPDT switch. Middle pin to the relay, side pin to the previous connection on the circuit board.
    • The other side I’d connect a 12V input or whatever was measured. I’d use 8AA batteries or a 12V power supply, and 1k ohm resistor connected in series, and if that didn’t work I’d try a couple other resistance values.
    • So the switch would be normal operation in one position, and then always off or on in the other depending if my power supply is functioning.