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did you check to see if the power is working first and didn't blow the breaker. then try plugging it back in. and is the machine loaded, if you can empty the machine see if it does anything
If it is an older device there may not be anything you can do about the internal case temperature other than to purchase an external cooling pad to place the machine on and draw heat away from it. If the machine has a mechanical hard disk you can however replace it with an SSD (solid state drive) and both improve performance and reduce the heat generated by the device.
It could be a bad switch, plug, thermostat or heating element. These items will need to be tested by a qualified electrician to determine which are faulty and causing the element not to heat up.
Have you tried taking the little float out of the water reservoir and turning it around? I have an english one, and I put it back together wrong when I was cleaning and I got the same flashing light. I would try turning the little floating thing around and see if it makes a difference.
If not, a word of warning is that I also bought a brewer from american ebay, and plugged it in and nothing happened. I then got an adaptor and nothing happened because I have already overloaded the machine and melted the motor inside just by turning it on the first time. That was 100 pounds of waste right there :( It could be that you fried it already if the above tip dosnt work. English Voltage is much higher than US sadly.
Never plug a 110 volt anything into a 220 volt supply and never plug a 220 volt anything into a 110 volt supply. They are just not designed to do so. Their electronic's power supply and their motors are specifically for the specific voltages. Changing the plug at the end does absolutely nothing. I just hope I have got to you in time!!!
It is possible that the boiler over heated and blew the element, disconnect one of the legs and turn machine on, if it trips breaker, then replace element.
depends on your definiton of doing nothing if there is no power what so ever then you have a bad thermal fuse.
if there is power and no heat then yes you need gas supply but it could also be a bad thermal fuse next to the heating duct assembly.
in some cases there is a chance the ignitor is bad
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