As drive prices have increased somewhat to roughly 200% in price locally over the last few weeks for raw drives, and external drive cases have not, I advised a client recently to purchase an external hard drive to save some money.
The drive case he brought over to me to have installed in his desktop was a Seagate GoFlex drive.
Seagate unfortunately doesn’t use screws to put the case together like other manufacturers, instead they use the dreaded plastic clips to hold the drive case together.
Below is a quick pictorial to safely take apart one of these cases to remove a drive (or swap a broken drive).
Essentially –
1. remove the base (pulls of easily).
2. stick a credit card under the top edge (I used a flat jewel screwdriver to get enough space), and unclip top
3. slide drive out
4. remove plastic feet and unscrew screws.
5. fold down metal sticker and remove drive.
My coffee machine decided it would give up the ghost a while ago (due to lack of use I think).
I tried descaling, but that wasn’t working, and from what I could see (or hear in my case) happening looked like something simple had happened – one of the hoses had come off or wasn’t completely on, as not enough water was coming through the front, and the bottom had a small leak.
As I have successfully fixed other coffee machines in the past with similar issues, I thought I’d have a go at repairing mine.
First up was a quick google for my machine (Krups Cube XN5005) – unfortunately most of the posts were of people with similar issues, and no help.
I brought the machine to the office and took a closer look. First issue is that it uses security oval style screws on some of the parts. Thats a pain in the ass, as its hard to find the exact screwdriver.
I drove off to the local tools market and did some shopping around, but no luck, so I bought a selection of needle nosed pliers instead.
There is zero reason to use security screws unless you’re trying to piss off the consumer. If I’ve bought something I should be able to take it apart myself and repair it.
I also managed to find the Nespresso service manual for it (Krups Cube Nespresso Service Manual – xn5005 manual). While the external design is nice, the engineering is a bit crappy. If they weren’t trying to overcomplicate the design to keep the consumer out it would be a lot simpler. Sigh.
First to come off is the front chromed plastic part. Push both sides in and pull off.
I managed to get one side off, then the other. Once you see how it clips on its fairly easy to get off.
With that off, unclip the next plastic part on the nozzle.
Next up is to remove the front faceplate.
Flip the unit upside down, then get 2 flat screwdrivers and put into both of the entry slots at the bottom. Twist slightly and it should come off. If you have trouble, do one side first, then the other. I usually get a credit card into the gap I make when I twist the screwdriver so that its easier to do.
The top should come straight off without too much hassle once you have the evil clips off at the bottom.
Next up is the back panel, with the security screws. As I couldn’t find the exact screwdriver, I bought a selection of pliers and they came out fairly easily.
In case anyone can find them, the diameter is a 4mm oval shape.
I basically sat and twisted gently to get the screws out.
You need to remove the 3 at the back, and the two front ones at the bottom (closest to the back), for a total of 5 screws.
Once those five screws are out, the back can come off. Its a bit fiddly, as it didn’t want to budge much on the water tank side, but perseverance paid off.
Once you have the back off, the machine is reasonably accessible.
In my case, I just had to reseat one of the hoses, and retest.
The manual does give further instructions on how to get more of it disassembled from there, but thats as far as I needed to go.
While I was in there I gave it a bit of a clean also.
Compared to the other machine I have (a Saeco fully automatic), this is slightly better designed, but less serviceable. It still has the issue of electrics and water routing in the same area’s, which is silly, as that could be a failure/hazard point, but its safer than some i’ve seen.
Hopefully mine will now continue to give a few more years of service!.
If you need parts for them, this site appears to have some –
And of course after I finish this post, I find someone else doing similar things here –
https://chrisinmtown.github.io/blog/20100627_nespresso.html
Oh well..
Good luck!
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