Important Safety Reminders and Legal Stuff – Don’t Skip:

Alas, with the litigious nature of this society, the following disclaimers and safety information are required and by using any of the material in this guide, you agree to the following:

This document is a guide to opening up your fridge and fiddling with it in a manner the manufacturer did not intend a consumer to do so. Thus proceeding with these instructions could be DANGEROUS to the point of ignoring warnings or taking needed precautions could result in damage, serious injury, OR DEATH. Perhaps this is a little melodramatic, but see the next bullet.

You will be working with the part of the fridge that controls the wall outlet electrical power. While obvious to most, UNPLUG THE FRIDGE BEFORE WORKING ON IT lest you electrocute yourself rendering the repair moot.

You will be required to perform a de-soldering operation removing 2 electronic components (capacitors) and solder in 2 new ones. If you don’t know what soldering is, or you feel uneasy about what this might entail, ask someone who has experience with this sort of thing (who has perhaps successfully assembled a Heathkit or Velleman electronic kit).

This document outlines a fix that appears to be common to this fridge make/model. It is possible that your fridge make/model has something else/additional wrong with it and may need a different/additional repair.

These instructions are provided as-is where-is with no warrantee whatsoever. You decide if this is fit for your particular purpose and you assume all risks in doing so. Due to the variance of capabilities of the individual reading this, and the possible failure modes of any electronic circuit, I can’t foresee that this would be the correct course of action to take to repair your fridge without going thru an exhaustive set of diagnostics using equipment you probably don’t have. If you want a 100% (99%?) sure thing, call in the Maytag Repairman if you can pull him from fixing those toy machines on the new commercials. That’s why it costs you a buck and a quarter to get him there – he has to pay for the tools and insurance that would allow him to diagnose what’s wrong, or at least understand the whole board needs to be replaced and cover the insurance should something go awry.

It is quite possible that your fridge is broken to the point that this repair won’t work, or that further damage to your fridge might occur either because of the repair or your attempt at the repair. If you are at all concerned by this, STOP READING NOW and don’t bother with this procedure. Get the Maytag Repairman in.

You release me the author of this doc, and anyone who might distribute this info in part or in whole, from any liability whatsoever related to, or resulting from the use of these instructions and/or diagrams, including any incidental or consequential damages, whether you’ve told me about it or not. If your state or jurisdiction does not allow for this, then you agree you should either a) stop reading now, throw this away, and not use this guide; or b) I’ll limit my liability to you as the maximum of what you can prove you actually paid me for this information; or the equivalent of US$0.01 whichever is higher, payable by any means I choose (might be in Bolivars….), you pay postage.

Soldering irons get REALLY, REALLY hot and can burn you in an instant. Grab the right end the first time.

The board you’ll be working on contains delicate electronic components that can be damaged by static electricity. One static shock can make it an expensive paperweight. Wear cotton, avoid rubbing any body part on the rug and the like to minimize the risk of static shock.

Keep the kids away while you work unless yours can understand the dangers as well and can be relied upon to follow both these instructions and yours to keep their fingers out of dangerous places. I think teaching kids how to fix things passes on an excellent skill and can help reduce the ‘throw-away” nature of our society.

Be prepared to quickly unplug the fridge if something doesn’t look right: flames, smoke, sparks, loud noises (from the fridge, not the kids), blown fuses or tripped breakers.

Trademarks and products names are owned by their respective companies.

This document and photos are copyrighted materials by me describing my experiences in repairing my fridge. I grant you a non-exclusive right to use these materials to help you better understand your fridge as long as the document stays in it’s original form, contains all copyright marks, and is not incorporated into a larger work that is then used for commercial for-fee purposes (e.g. wind up in Maytag’s repair manual…).

Above all, use common sense. If you’re not sure you have any, ask a true friend. If you know you have none, borrow a friend who does.

© 2007 by Stephen Beck V1.0

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Use at your Own Risk

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Maytag MFI2568AEW manual Important Safety Reminders and Legal Stuff Don’t Skip