Difficulty

Moderate

Steps

2

Time Required

                          3 hours            

Sections

1

  • How to repair Einhell BT-JS 400E Jigsaw
  • 2 steps

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  • BackEinhell BT-JS 400E Jigsaw

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Introduction

It needed to be fully dismantled to find and repair a broken crimp connection between a motor brush and inductor coil (hidden by shrink-fit tubing)

What you need

Step 1

              How to repair Einhell BT-JS 400E Jigsaw               
  • Shows general view of the jigsaw. The blue plastic casing needs to be split in half by undoing about 8 screws on the casing and two screws holing on the foot.
  • You may need to remove the paper advertising sticker to pull the two halves apart.
  • Pull apart gently as many items may fall out depending on how much old grease and wood dust sticks them to the casing.
  • Unscrew two bolts holding in the mains cable, then motor, switch, wiring, in fact everything can be pulled out of the casing.
  • Good idea to note or photograph the above procedure to ease reassembly.

Shows general view of the jigsaw. The blue plastic casing needs to be split in half by undoing about 8 screws on the casing and two screws holing on the foot.

You may need to remove the paper advertising sticker to pull the two halves apart.

Pull apart gently as many items may fall out depending on how much old grease and wood dust sticks them to the casing.

Unscrew two bolts holding in the mains cable, then motor, switch, wiring, in fact everything can be pulled out of the casing.

Good idea to note or photograph the above procedure to ease reassembly.

1024

Step 2

  • Images show both casing halves with the motor and cam and oscillator partially removed. It’s easier to undo the two screws holding in the mains cable, so everything comes away from the casing in one go.
  • With full access, its now possible to do continuity tests with a multimeter to find and locate a break in the circuit. In my case there was a break between one of the graphite bush assemblies (both arrowed) and one the big stator coils.
  • There was an in-line component hidden under the black shrink-fit insulator in the suspect connecting wire where there was no electrical continuity as found above. The shrink-fit was removed with a scalpel.
  • The hidden component was a small inductor coil (to filter out high frequencies?). Its connection lead had come out of the crimp with some blackening caused by arcing. The old crimp was cut off replaced after some cleaning.
  • I didn’t have any replacement 4mm brass crimps but used what I had (15mm 4mm dia stainless tubes) and used old blunt snips for crimping. There was enough space for my larger crimp. New insulation was applied.
  • With the jigsaw in pieces, you could consider cleaning and re-greasing if required. Or even replacing the bushes, though mine extended 7mm and considered OK.

Images show both casing halves with the motor and cam and oscillator partially removed. It’s easier to undo the two screws holding in the mains cable, so everything comes away from the casing in one go.

With full access, its now possible to do continuity tests with a multimeter to find and locate a break in the circuit. In my case there was a break between one of the graphite bush assemblies (both arrowed) and one the big stator coils.

There was an in-line component hidden under the black shrink-fit insulator in the suspect connecting wire where there was no electrical continuity as found above. The shrink-fit was removed with a scalpel.

The hidden component was a small inductor coil (to filter out high frequencies?). Its connection lead had come out of the crimp with some blackening caused by arcing. The old crimp was cut off replaced after some cleaning.

I didn’t have any replacement 4mm brass crimps but used what I had (15mm 4mm dia stainless tubes) and used old blunt snips for crimping. There was enough space for my larger crimp. New insulation was applied.

With the jigsaw in pieces, you could consider cleaning and re-greasing if required. Or even replacing the bushes, though mine extended 7mm and considered OK.

A break in the circuit was found and repaired (simple crimping) after a full dismantling. Worth taking images during strip to aid re-assembly.

Cancel: I did not complete this guide.

Author

                    Dave Empson                     

Member since: 01/30/2017

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