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The Elna 6000 is a sewing machine made by Elna, a Swiss brand and former manufacturer of textile machines, including fabric presses and sewing, cover stitch, and overlock machines.

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Question re: pcb switch

This switch has 4 "buttons".

Buttons 1, 3 and 4 are in a down position (I guess OFF?).

Button 2 is in up, position, "ON".

When you see this type of button positioning on a switch is it:

a) there is a definite problem on the circuit board/somewhere

i) with number 1, 3, and 4?

ii) with number 2?

b) totally normal and part of its job, would need more information about the specific machine etc.

I am just practising learning :) The machine has a malfunction somewhere, I bought it in a broken condition so that I can have a go and learn.

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Hi Rosalind,

Having worked with computer boards for the last 40 years, those kind of switches are quite common. They are used to configure various settings on the board easily without having to rewire the board or place/remove jumper connectors.

Since we don't know what your switches configure without a theory of operation document and/or a set of schematic diagrams, I'd say you just have to assume that the switches are supposed to be in the state you found them; it's not likely that whatever issue you're having with the circuit board is related to those switches since under normal circumstances there is no reason to change them.

On the picture of the circuit board you included we can see that the top four pins of the switch are all connected to the same power plane but the only way to even get a hint as to what the switches do is to follow the circuit board traces and see where they go, in particular switch number two since that's the only one turned on. Since we can't see any traces on the top side of the board there, that means those pins are being fed through the board to either the other side or possibly an inside layer. If it's on the other side you might be able to follow the circuit, but of course if it's on a layer between the top and bottom that makes it a lot harder to follow. Sometimes putting a bright light behind it will allow you to see the interior layer but it depends on what other circuits are around as to whether you'll be able to see them or not.

Anyway, like I said it's doubtful your problem comes from the switches; your answer b) is the correct one. In trying to fix a circuit board you really need reference materials like those I mentioned previously in order to figure out what parts are working and what parts aren't.

What is the specific model number of your sewing machine? I have no idea if technical information is available for it, but we would need to know the model in order to have a chance to find the right documents for you.

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Hi Jerry, thank you very much for your detailed reply!! I followed your instructions and managed to trace the switches to another area of the pcb. They end between a resistor network (MR4), and an IC above it, (IC1). I used my multimeter and everything seems to have continuity/OL in places I would presume to be correct. I tried flicking the buttons up and down and continuity seems to behave as I would think it should between all those connections.

I think you are right that the switch is likely not the problem. It's the final component on the board that I thought "oh maybe I could check this too". I only have a multimeter you see. I've run a lot of other basic tests and have a feeling about what it might be, so I'm going to reassemble the machine now and see if my hunch is correct and go from there.

I've run out of space so I'll link the service manual in a second comment

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So the machine brand is Elna. Model 6004. Manufacturer Janome. Here is a link to the service manual, it has helped me to a degree but it does not have detailed electronics schematics. It seems to be quite hard to get schematics for sewing machines.

https://www.manualslib.com/manual/912164...

Thanks again, I really appreciate the time you took to reply to me

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