Originally Posted By: Dave Sherman
Originally Posted By: 440Magnum
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
The cap is for soft starting - limiting onrush current at startup.
No, its not. This is AC, not DC. The cap is there to provide a phase shift on the secondary windings so that you actually get a "rotating" magnetic field around the motor armature instead of one that just flip-flops back and forth. All single-phase motors have to have some phase-shifting mechanism in order to start, three-phase motors don't because the coil sets are naturally 120-degrees out of phase and inherently produce a rotating magnetic field. Very small single-phase motors use "shading coils" built into the stator windings, larger motors use start and run capacitors wired to a secondary set of windings in the motor. A large fan motor is typically a "PSC" (permanent split capacitor) that leaves the same capacitor in the circuit for starting and for running. Hermetic compressors usually have a separate start and run capacitor and a potential relay to disengage the start capacitor after the motor comes up to speed.
Thank you! Somebody got it right. Lots of bad info being handed out otherwise. The fan motor would use a run capacitor, and the replacement capacitor MUST have the same capacitance (microfarads) as the old one. Higher voltage rating is OK, lower voltage rating is not OK. If it's a dual cap unit, DON'T connect them together, just use one of them. If it's still having problems, then more likely your motor bearings are going bad. Don't just guess at how to wire electric motors if you don't know what you are doing!
Guys I contacted the person who sold me the cap and did some more research on the wiring. I did not wire the caps together if that's what you are thinking( i dont know who said that in the first place?). And yes I got the same uF and a higher voltage cap than rated, like i mentioned above. The only problem was that I wired the 2 Brn wire together like they did on a separate cap on a dual cap.
Solution: When using a dual cap you only wired one brn wire. When you are using a separate cap for the fan you wire in two.
The motor still runs fine. If it dies then i'll buy a new one. We barely use the AC anyways. Ran it all day yesterday!