Fagor Oven.

Does this go away over time, or is it a case of phoning up an engineer?

by RevenantSith

17 Comments

  1. Diced_and_Confused

    All your base are belong to us.

  2. nathan42100

    It may “go away” in that whatever is wrong is fixed by changing in temperature, changing how the electronics operate due to expansion and contraction.

    It will never “go away” in that it shouldn’t have done that in the first place and there’s more than a 0% chance it will reoccur.

    Time to call someone.

  3. Hairy_Tomato1866

    If it has a steam function maybe steam got into the console..?

  4. IronCaveApe

    Minecraft enchantment table language. Fire aspect III.

  5. DueAd197

    Gleep glop gloop, we want to crawl up inside you and look at your poop

  6. drsquig

    Try unplugging it, waiting a few minutes, and plugging it back in. Your be surprised what it can fix. I’d say water got in the screen somehow. Or someone hit the screen and you have dead spots in the screen.

  7. Foreign_Implement897

    I would do Tip-Yip braced in bantha milk in true Endor style.

  8. vodka_tsunami

    Becaaaaaaaause… Small computers don’t go well with high temps.

  9. Yoankah

    Someone must have pressed the “UFO takeoff” button in the lower right.

  10. practicating

    There’s a few causes, but in terms of repair there is four possibilities.

    1 loose cable
    2 burnt cable
    3 bad display
    4 bad microprocessor board

    A little bit of percussive maintenance might make it go away, but it also might make it worse. This isn’t something that will go away unless unplugging for 5 minutes or so, clears it.

    If it was my home oven, I’d open it up then with a soldering iron and maybe six bucks in parts I’d be able to fix it. And if I couldn’t, I’d be okay to wait a week or two for the parts to come in. But you’re probably better at off calling your technician.

  11. OptimysticPizza

    Hope it’s under warranty, but this looks like it may be an older oven. If you’re in a corporator institutional place, they hopefully have a budget for repairs. If it’s a mom and pop, brace yourself. I just got billed around a thousand bucks for a tech to come replace a $10 fuse that I already knew was the problem.

    The fun part about an older combi is that they may have stopped manufacturing the screens, so they’ll tell you you need a retrofit for the new screen, which means , new wiring, etc. That’s what happened with my old alto shaam combi. Ended up buying the original version on ebay for a fraction of the price, and did it myself.