Hi, I have a huge problem with my TT2040 machine that I had just repaired. My girlfriend accidentally dropped it and the ABS housing of the head (the one for the zero finish) broke. Do you happen to have this spare part for sale? I need the entire ABS mechanism that follows the lines of the body. Thx
Through your video I replace the battery . It works like new now except one thing. When I use the hair cutter after a while the led starts blinking. But when I use the hair trimmer it works like new for an hour at least . Do you think that the problem is on the motor?
Have a look at my video of a similar issue here,: ruclips.net/video/PgmaM34ay9s/видео.html you may well be able to get a USB charger for it, in which case you can hook it up to a portable power bank and can continue using it ;-)
Battery isn't all that bad to replace, 5 minutes to get to it, buy a home phone battery pack, NIMH AAA 2.4v, and solder your leads together positive to positive and negative to negative and you're done.
Got the same machine and it's my fav electric trimmer that i've ever used, i haven't soldered much before and when i've tried it hasn't gone well. I really wanna save this trimmer, it's in great shape otherwise but won't turn on anymore, i assume the battery is toast. Any tips when soldering so i don't destroy it?
@@Pingaheimer can't reply from my phonne for some reason so this will have to be a summary of the paragraph i typed out lmao. Buy yourself a 2.4v handheld phone battery, they're the cheapest and easiest option to find. get a 700/750mAh, the charging circuitry prefers if you stay as close to the original capacity as you can. Once you've taken it apart and you have the battery unit, cut the leads as close to the battery as you can, from there strip back a couple mm of the wire, it should be 22/24 awg if I recall so it will be a bit tricky, just take your time here so you don't need to cut twice. get your phone battery, take it out of the plastic shell it's in and use electrical tape to tape down the welded tabs to their appropriate sides, you'll likely have one facing down and one facing up with their corresponding wires. cut the wire to be roughly equal to the original wires length. After this, flux & tin each wire end, Red wire to red wire and black to black. you can optionally also twist the opposing wires together or push them together and then tin them, This isn't a high stress joint so it doesn't really matter. After you've done that and are ready to solder it, place your soldering iron underneath the wire but making firm contact and immediately push a piece of solder into the top of the connection. It should almost instantly start to flow down into the joint, you only need a second or two for it to flow. After all that, put it back into the battery tray like it was originally, and electrical tape the entire battery unit together like it was as well being careful not to tape the buttons. Then just put it together and you should be good to go.
Відео стало у нагоді. Дякую за вашу працю.👍
Будь ласка, радий, що це допомогло
Hi, I have a huge problem with my TT2040 machine that I had just repaired. My girlfriend accidentally dropped it and the ABS housing of the head (the one for the zero finish) broke. Do you happen to have this spare part for sale? I need the entire ABS mechanism that follows the lines of the body. Thx
this is the most epic change of the battery that I ever had
"thanks" Philips
If I knew it from the start I would have looked at something else
Same. Absolute trash quality. Just classic coming from American corporations built Chinese trash and charged for high quality
Through your video I replace the battery . It works like new now except one thing. When I use the hair cutter after a while the led starts blinking. But when I use the hair trimmer it works like new for an hour at least . Do you think that the problem is on the motor?
If you've swapped the battery and it works for the hair trimmer, then it could be the cutter motor, or perhaps the cutter draws more power?
I've got the same issue. Battery will barely hold a charge, and I don't know if it's worth replacing. What better model did you go for?
Have a look at my video of a similar issue here,: ruclips.net/video/PgmaM34ay9s/видео.html you may well be able to get a USB charger for it, in which case you can hook it up to a portable power bank and can continue using it ;-)
Yep complete garbage. Battery died just after warranty expired. That is not easily replaceable
Battery isn't all that bad to replace, 5 minutes to get to it, buy a home phone battery pack, NIMH AAA 2.4v, and solder your leads together positive to positive and negative to negative and you're done.
Got the same machine and it's my fav electric trimmer that i've ever used, i haven't soldered much before and when i've tried it hasn't gone well. I really wanna save this trimmer, it's in great shape otherwise but won't turn on anymore, i assume the battery is toast. Any tips when soldering so i don't destroy it?
@@Pingaheimer can't reply from my phonne for some reason so this will have to be a summary of the paragraph i typed out lmao.
Buy yourself a 2.4v handheld phone battery, they're the cheapest and easiest option to find. get a 700/750mAh, the charging circuitry prefers if you stay as close to the original capacity as you can.
Once you've taken it apart and you have the battery unit, cut the leads as close to the battery as you can, from there strip back a couple mm of the wire, it should be 22/24 awg if I recall so it will be a bit tricky, just take your time here so you don't need to cut twice.
get your phone battery, take it out of the plastic shell it's in and use electrical tape to tape down the welded tabs to their appropriate sides, you'll likely have one facing down and one facing up with their corresponding wires. cut the wire to be roughly equal to the original wires length.
After this, flux & tin each wire end, Red wire to red wire and black to black. you can optionally also twist the opposing wires together or push them together and then tin them, This isn't a high stress joint so it doesn't really matter. After you've done that and are ready to solder it, place your soldering iron underneath the wire but making firm contact and immediately push a piece of solder into the top of the connection. It should almost instantly start to flow down into the joint, you only need a second or two for it to flow.
After all that, put it back into the battery tray like it was originally, and electrical tape the entire battery unit together like it was as well being careful not to tape the buttons. Then just put it together and you should be good to go.
can li-on be used instead of nimh?
@@HOTSPEEDMike nah, the BMS doesn't play nicely with lithium cells.
Soldering isn't that easy