Zum Hauptinhalt wechseln

Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen

Was du brauchst

  1. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen, Philips Sonicare 2  öffnen: Schritt 1, Bild 1 von 1
    • Ziehe die Zahnbürste nach oben und entferne sie.

  2. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 2, Bild 1 von 1
    • Entferne die 12 mm Torx T8 Schraube am Boden. Heble dann die Bodenplatte mit einem Plastiköffnungswerkzeug ab.

  3. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 3, Bild 1 von 2 Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 3, Bild 2 von 2
    • Entferne die innere Elektronik. Du musst dazu die roten Rasten wegdrücken, so wie im Bild gezeigt. Dadurch kann die Ladespule herausgeholt werden.

    • Sei sehr vorsichtig und beschädige nicht die Ladespule. Du musst sonst die Ladespule so wie im zweiten Bild wieder anlöten.

    Do all the three clips need to be pushed towards the center? Can you share details on how to pry the clips?

    Marc T - Antwort

    Yes, press them toward the center…

    Randy Rue - Antwort

    In my case, I didn’t remove the charging coil. I just pry loose the two white plastic anchors (part of the charging coil) on the two sides while pushing backward from the tip of vibrating rod at the other hand.

    Anonymous - Antwort

    Yes, white clips way to go here.

    Robert Cole - Antwort

    How (exactly) do you loosen the two white plastic anchors? (Press them towards the center?). What tools did you use? Thanks!

    Daisy Stanton - Antwort

  4. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 4, Bild 1 von 1
    • Nun kannst du wie gezeigt die Inneneinheit herausziehen.

  5. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 5, Bild 1 von 1
    • Entferne die weiße Akkuabdeckung.

  6. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 6, Bild 1 von 1
    • Heble die weiße Abdeckung über der Platine ab.

  7. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen, Akku: Schritt 7, Bild 1 von 1
    • Heble den Akku mit einem Kunststoffwerkzeu an einem Ende teilweise hoch.

    • Entferne den Akku noch nicht ganz, er ist noch an der Platine festgelötet.

    • Benutze kein Metallwerkzeug, das kann gefährlich sein. Aus dem Akku könnten gefährliche Chemikalien austreten, er könnte in Brand geraten oder explodieren.

  8. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 8, Bild 1 von 1
    • Entlöte die beiden Akkuanschlüsse auf der Platine.

  9. Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 9, Bild 1 von 3 Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 9, Bild 2 von 3 Philips Sonicare 2 Akku austauschen: Schritt 9, Bild 3 von 3
    • Die Spannung des Akkupacks beträgt etwa 2,8 bis 2,9 V. Du kannst den Pack durch zwei in Reihe geschaltete AAA NiMH-Zellen ersetzen. Trenne den Akkupack ab, nicht aber den Metallanschluss der Platine.

    where is the rest? remove what metallic connection? what do you use to solder the two back together?

    gary garcia - Antwort

    he’s referring to the two skinny leads that attach the battery to the circuit board.

    I’m about to try this given how poor the quality of a replacement I bought is. As long as you have a means to connect 2 AAAs in series and a means to connect the + and - ends of the battery to the PCB, it should work. again, I haven’t tried this and probably do it when I’m done being !#^&@@ off about false claims by 3rd party battery manufacturers.

    I just wish Philips just created a normal compartment for 2 rechargeable AAAs in the first place rather than have to go through so many hoops to repair a product that was planned to go in the trash - travesty! ok - i’m done venting.

    Chinarut -

Abschluss

Um dein Gerät wieder zusammenzubauen, folge den Schritten in umgekehrter Reihenfolge.

2 weitere Nutzer:innen haben diese Anleitung absolviert.

Besonderer Dank geht an diese Übersetzer:innen:

en de

100%

VauWeh hilft uns, die Welt in Ordnung zu bringen! Wie kann ich mithelfen?
Hier starten ›

Team

IUPUI, Team S6-G2, Baechle Fall 2017 Mitglied von IUPUI, Team S6-G2, Baechle Fall 2017

IUPUI-BAECHLE-F17S6G2

3 Mitglieder

8 Anleitungen geschrieben

7 Kommentare

Step 3 is incorrect. The only things keeping the internals secured in the casing are the two ‘elbows’ clearly visible in Step 3 picture 2. Simply pry these away from the depressions in the casing and the works slide out, with a little push from the top stem. The method describing the 3 red clips does no good (besides being nearly impossible to accomplish) and presents a clear risk of breaking the hair-thin wires

craig chatfield - Antwort

The method described in Step 3 to remove the internals from the casing is incorrect. Rather than prying the 3 red clips (nearly impossible anyhow) all that is required is to pry the two ‘elbows’ visible in step 3, photo 2, away from the depressions in the casing. Voila.

craig chatfield - Antwort

The two comments are correct, the earlier teardown is from a much earlier Sonicare. All the current models just need a spatula to depress the white detents while applying pressure gently from the brush end. The assembly will then easily pop right out.

jhuffaker - Antwort

How to get a new battery for this Philips Sonicare 2 Plaque control toothbrush.

Well, the VOLTAGE of this battery is about 2.8 to 2.9 Volts. The size is same as that of TWO AAA Cells. Two AAA in series can easily replace the existing battery.

Ni-Mh AAA cells of energizer can do the job. Disconnect the existing battery but don’t remove the metallic connection to the circuit.

uniquesolutions - Antwort

Thank you for the comments about removing the “innards”. I spent a couple hours yesterday trying to remove those red clips! This morning I saw the comments. It’s still a little bit of a challenge to get both elbows pried, but I found out it’s easier if you apply quite a bit of pressure to the brush end while manipulating the elbows. At first I was trying to light of pressure and the opposite elbow would always fall back into the depression while I tried to pry the other side. More pressure and the problem was resolved. Again, thanks to Craig for his observation. ifixit needs to correct the above instructions to reflect this.

lindajohnjosie - Antwort

I’ll echo the sentiments in the other comments about Step 3. What I did was position the toothbrush upside-down on a countertop, and while pressing the toothbrush head metal connector down firmly, I used pliers to pry each elbow, one at a time.

Timothy Chan - Antwort

If anyone is still messing with one of these..

The above comments are correct; also, rather than try to manipulate those two white clips, you can squeeze the outer casing so that they (the two "elbows", "clips") are no longer in their grooves, and no longer holding the innards in.

Just squeeze the case on the sides that the clips aren't. At the same time, VERY GENTLY press the other end (bar that the toothbrush attaches onto) against your work surface.

It may try to only let one end out, holding the other and going wonky (mine did). While still squeezing the outer case, push it back to it's original position; squeeze slightly harder, and try again. Eventually, both sides should come free at the same time, and you're good.

Charles E. Cheese - Antwort

Kommentar hinzufügen

Seitenaufrufe:

Letzte 24 Stunden: 4

Letzte 7 Tage: 27

Letzte 30 Tage: 110

Insgesamt: 9,227