Update.
I having looked at a couple of mains powered modules and the problem in both (two different units) was that the DC power supply is badly designed. Both circuits, use a low value series resistor in series with a voltage dropping capacitor then a bridge rectifier which feed a large reservoir capacitor with a zener diode across it. On both the zener diode had gone short circuit. the problem is that the output relay consumes two watts or so, so when the relay is de-energised, this two watts has to go some where which over stressses the zener, which dies. Also any mains spike energy ends up going into the zener at more or less full amplitude, which does not help. If the circuit had an inverter and sent the same current as the relay takes into a resistor when the relay is off, then the zener would hardly be necessary, as the load would be constant.
On a fan timer module, the DC line was 15V when the output triac was off, when it was energised the voltage fell to 7.8Y, due to the added current (~5mA) feeding the triac. This causes the timing cap to have to partially discharge via the internal input protection diodes on the CMOS 4000 chip. Not good for the chip as there is no current limiting!
Frank