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Posted: 5/9/2022 9:38:27 AM EDT
On the book of faces, my feed is littered with people talking about this hitting them over the past two days. The first good heat wave usually wipes out the weak capacitors that bulged over the winter.
Do you keep a spare compressor capacitor for your AC units units? Because you should. How to Replace a Capacitor |
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Quoted: Start cap will be your most common issue. Always keep a spare. View Quote Quoted: Back in my day, we used to crank start the motors by hand View Quote Most DMMs have a capacitor reading function. It's worth the 10min to check them rather than wait until they die. If they test more than 10% under the nameplate value It's time to start thinking replacement. |
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Yes, I have an AmRad Turbo 200 on my shelf, so it can be adapted into whatever unit needs it. I've gotten over 5 years on the one in my 3.5ton heat pump so far. I've advanced my spare to friends and family in a pinch and told them to either order a replacement sent to me or just give me $65 for it so I can order it myself.
By having them order it, the hope is that they see how easy it is to be prepared for next time on their own. (They can even get them on Amazon, but usually not the cheapest price). |
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Mine went out a couple weeks ago. Had a spare on hand and got it swapped out and ordered a new spare the same day. No reason not to have a spare on hand.
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They are good to keep on hand, if they keep failing either your compressor or condenser fan motor is likely on it's way out.
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Yup, I keep a spare Turbo 200X on hand, because both Murphy and thermodynamics indicate that it'll die at 6pm on the hottest Saturday of the year.
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Yeah I keep an extra for the one in my machine shed, it seems to go every year or two and the last time it happened I had to pay $55 at the local store for one (was like $15 shipped online but didn't want to wait).
That reminds me I need to get in there and clear out the winter mouse nests that are almost certainly built back up again. |
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My Dad's burned out a contactor block on the inside unit. Dad knows how how to work on it and has replaced dozens of them, but he didn't have time to fool with it and called a repairman.
$1400 fucking dollars!!! He got double teamed without lube. |
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When I bought my current house, the inspector noted that something wasn't quite right with the HVAC operation and recommended an HVAC tech investigate further. I decided to look myself first, and I found the start capacitor in the air handler was asploded. $12 fix. I bought two, so I'd have a spare if it happened again. I kept it in the shipping box and left it right next to the air handler, so I wouldn't lose it in my workshop.
They're cheap, and I'd rather be able to fix it in ten minutes than just hope a local shop has the model I need in stock or to wait 2-3 days for one to be delivered, especially in July. |
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Quoted: Mine went out a couple weeks ago. Had a spare on hand and got it swapped out and ordered a new spare the same day. No reason not to have a spare on hand. View Quote Same brand and model as my HVAC provider carries on their truck. They charge $145.00 ! |
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Also make sure you are yearly cleaning the outdoor coil. Dirty coils cause higher than normal head pressure. Which can put a more than normal load on the run caps. Plus a dirty coil is worth about a 10% decrease in operational efficiency.
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Yeah I should have gotten a spares last year but didn't.
Will get them this week, thanks for the reminder. |
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Quoted: Spare contactor never hurt either. Ive used a long screwdriver to give a good flick. Most DMMs have a capacitor reading function. It's worth the 10min to check them rather than wait until they die. If they test more than 10% under the nameplate value It's time to start thinking replacement. View Quote Start capacitors are just big electrolytics right? Don't they generally fail the other way with capacitance going up? At least that's what I usually see with smaller ones. I'd bet that a start capacitor with 10% under the rated value is completely in spec, and is probably perfectly healthy. Actually, I'd be surprised if a start capacitor would have tighter tolerances than +or- 20% anyway. I don't think most people will have the kind of equipment on hand to test a capacitor for health, if a problem isn't already showing up. |
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Electric voltage spikes play hell on the insulated barrier material in capacitors. Keep spares, they are cheap.
Another precaution is spray ant poison around the compartment that holds the AC unit's controls if you live in fire ant territory. Leave the power off and let it dry. When i used to do service calls, four of those had contactor failures due to fire ants. Fire ants must be attracted to them for some odd reason. Opened the panels and they had red beards made of dead fire ants. |
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Quoted: Start capacitors are just big electrolytics right? Don't they generally fail the other way with capacitance going up? At least that's what I usually see with smaller ones. I'd bet that a start capacitor with 10% under the rated value is completely in spec, and is probably perfectly healthy. Actually, I'd be surprised if a start capacitor would have tighter tolerances than +or- 20% anyway. I don't think most people will have the kind of equipment on hand to test a capacitor for health, if a problem isn't already showing up. View Quote Every run capacitor I've needed to replace for myself or someone else has had low or no capacity when tested. Dielectric breakdown has been the failure mode, with the zero capacity ones measuring a short circuit as well. That includes the bulged ones as well as the ones with no externally visible symptoms other than failure to start / run the motors. Under no circumstances have I measured any of those capacitors to be above the labeled tolerance, only below. |
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Quoted: My Dad's burned out a contactor block on the inside unit. Dad knows how how to work on it and has replaced dozens of them, but he didn't have time to fool with it and called a repairman. $1400 fucking dollars!!! He got double teamed without lube. View Quote Crooked assed repairment are a thing. Went over to my BIL's house years ago.. A 3 ton Copeland compressor was sitting on board. I inquire. He said his repairman said the compressor was locked up. Just for giggles, i ohmed it out. Looked good on the meter. The old cap and contactor were in the garbage. Cap was dirty, but good. Contactor was burned open. I wired up the compressor to the cap and she fired up. Even puked oil on his work bench. Fucker ripped him off. All that was bad was the contactor. In those days, that was a $15 part. |
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There was a post a month or so ago about this. Read the four pages and learned things. Two days later, my handler was running for a while and it wasn’t getting any cooler. Checked the outside fan like the thread said, and what do you know? It wasn’t running. Watched a few videos, went to the local supply house and bought two US made capacitors ($21 a piece). Took me less than ten minutes to replace and works like a charm.
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Power surges caused by lightning are hell on capacitors.
If you're in a lightning-prone area, spares are an especially a good idea. |
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After a lighting strike our business go’s bonkers for a week
Caps are just one thing lighting loves to toast Caps are cheap, my service call is expensive So is my one hour min labor |
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As luck would have it, I have a spare capacitor for my compressor but not for the blower motor. Guess which one failed Friday night? I pulled enough sheet metal off it to give the squirrel cage a spin to get it going, left it in "Fan On" mode over the weekend. I ordered a new capacitor from McMaster-Carr but it has to come from Chicago so I won't have it until tomorrow.
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I've got 2 spare caps. I need to find an evap coil that won't leak after 2 years. Cheap aluminum shit.
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I said F it and had an entirely new unit put in on Friday. 14 seer, 3-ton. Last unit was 20+ years old.
Mine was NOT the capacitor. |
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Quoted: My Dad's burned out a contactor block on the inside unit. Dad knows how how to work on it and has replaced dozens of them, but he didn't have time to fool with it and called a repairman. $1400 fucking dollars!!! He got double teamed without lube. View Quote I had it almost as bad with my mom's AC last year. It happened about 4 on a Friday afternoon going into the hottest stretch of weather we had. I determined immediately it was a capacitor and pulled it. Unfortunately I couldn't find one in town before all the parts shops shut down early on Saturday. I called the outfit that installed the HVAC, who was supposedly friends with my dad. They came out Saturday and replaced the cap I'd already removed, checked the freon which was fine and washed out the AC unit coils. $390. Not only would I not recommend him, I wouldn't piss up his ass if his guts were on fire. |
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The capacitor went out on one of our units a few months ago on a Saturday. Checked the big box stores and they didn't carry one. Ordered on Amazon at 4pm on a Saturday and had it by 1pm Sunday. 5min fix and it was back to blowing cold. Got really lucky.
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Quoted: The capacitor went out on one of our units a few months ago on a Saturday. Checked the big box stores and they didn't carry one. Ordered on Amazon at 4pm on a Saturday and had it by 1pm Sunday. 5min fix and it was back to blowing cold. Got really lucky. View Quote As much as I hate Amazon, prime shipping on parts like this has bailed out more than once in the last few years. |
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Quoted: Yep, mine has a VFD, no start/run capacitors. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I suggest using modern AC’s that don’t use run capacitors. Yep, mine has a VFD, no start/run capacitors. Yes let's just rip out our perfectly working AC units that may need a $50-$100 part here and there for one that is $$$$$ |
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Yep have both Amrad start and run capacitors as backups.
To damn hot in Houston to not have them during the summer. |
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Quoted: On the book of faces, my feed is littered with people talking about this hitting them over the past two days. The first good heat wave usually wipes out the weak capacitors that bulged over the winter. Do you keep a spare compressor capacitor for your AC units units? Because you should. View Quote Yep, several, plus motors, plus contactors, plus fan control boards, plus transformers. All cheap on Amazon. |
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Quoted: My Dad's burned out a contactor block on the inside unit. Dad knows how how to work on it and has replaced dozens of them, but he didn't have time to fool with it and called a repairman. $1400 fucking dollars!!! He got double teamed without lube. View Quote He must make a lot of money to have not had time to save 1400$ |
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Got a van full of capacitors, contactors and relays as I am the asshole that will come to your aid when it's 100* on the 4th of July. You'll think of the $145 normal rate for diag and repair as a fucking treat.
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