If you are methodical and have some 6 point wrenches the machines are 
pretty easy to strip down. Take the boilers out and to a garage that 
actually fixes things, maybe a suspension ship - bring some beer for their 
inconvenience. Wrap each boiler in a towel and clamp softly in a vice, then 
go at that hex fitting on the bottom with a big air tool and a tight 
fitting impact socket. Mine were impossibly stuck and it took about 45 
seconds to get the elements free, and that included some dramatic smoke as 
they started to move. The removal took me about 30 minutes round trip from 
my house - it is super easy if you can get access to a big air wrench, the 
hammer motion is magic. Don't try to remove element using a giant breaker 
bar, that would be too much torque.

On Sunday, March 8, 2020 at 2:37:50 PM UTC-7, Joseph Helminiak wrote:
>
> The Seller is going to ask "Joe Kolb" what she should sell it for.  
>
> IMO from texting with her It will need a heating element and I would 
> replace both of them as long as I was tearing it apart
>
> I really don't want to spend too much, if so I would just get a DE 
> Machine. The backorder is 7 weeks on those now, SMH
>
> -jjh
>
> On Sunday, March 8, 2020 at 2:51:12 PM UTC-5, Ira wrote:
>>
>> Hello Joseph, 
>>
>> Sunday, March 8, 2020, 11:42:14 AM, you wrote: 
>>
>> > What is a fair price for a Brewtus? 2005 model, big orange power 
>> > switch.  Will trip a GFI breaker every time you plug it in. Will not 
>> > trip the circuit breaker if it's not on a GFI circuit. I'm thinking 
>> > one or more heating elements need to be replaced. However that 
>> > requires almost a complete disassembly of the machine to take out the 
>> whole boilers. 
>>
>> Depends if you can repair it yourself. I've not done it, but the Brewtus 
>> is 
>> pretty easy to work on and there is plenty of documentation about the 
>> pieces and how it works. 
>>
>> In that case, I'd say $100-$300. I'd certainly pay that and repair it 
>> for amusement. But make sure it works first. if you need the 
>> controller or thermostat, that changes things. If need be, plug it 
>> into a non GFI outlet and test that it gets hot, makes steam, the pump 
>> pumps and refills the boiler. If it does all that, then it's worth it. 
>>
>> If it doesn't work or you need to take it to a repair shop, probably 
>> worth nothing unless you have a connection to a repair tech you trust 
>> to do it correctly at a fair price. The tech has probably never seen a 
>> Brewtus before so they need to be competent, in my experience, not 
>> that easy to find. 
>>
>> -- Ira 
>>
>>

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