coleman10
Well-known member
I've read through a few similar posts on this, but they don't seem to fit the bill and I'm having a pre-senior moment with this for some reason.
I just replaced my AC and grabbed the blower motor out of the air handler so I can use it in the garage. It's 240, does not have a capacitor (no brown wires), and the speeds are selected by dip switches, not by hooking up one of three wires to hot. There is one pigtail connector for the power, red and black, and a ground coming directly off the motor. I included the schematics below just in case.
So my question with this is, if I want to hook it up to 110, do I connect one of the 240 legs to hot or both legs to hot? I'd hook up the ground, of course, but since there isn't a common, I guess I'd just cap or tape that off on the wire I use. ? The white wires are shown in the schematic as low voltage, not line voltage, so I guess the power to those have already already been stepped down.
Thanks, guys.
I just replaced my AC and grabbed the blower motor out of the air handler so I can use it in the garage. It's 240, does not have a capacitor (no brown wires), and the speeds are selected by dip switches, not by hooking up one of three wires to hot. There is one pigtail connector for the power, red and black, and a ground coming directly off the motor. I included the schematics below just in case.
So my question with this is, if I want to hook it up to 110, do I connect one of the 240 legs to hot or both legs to hot? I'd hook up the ground, of course, but since there isn't a common, I guess I'd just cap or tape that off on the wire I use. ? The white wires are shown in the schematic as low voltage, not line voltage, so I guess the power to those have already already been stepped down.
Thanks, guys.