mrodgers
Well-known member
Time for me to utilize some of the forum knowledge I hope. I have an ancient unit, no idea what it is. It looks a mess, it's all one unit, the air goes outside through the unit and back into a mobile home tied into the furnace duct. It runs completely separate from the furnace.
The problem, the unit does not shut off. The blower shuts down when the thermostat stops calling for air. But the compressor continues to run unless I throw the breaker.
This is what it looks like inside. Searching, I see a contactor as the typical problem and it's on modern machines and doesn't have all of this. I know enough to get me in trouble, LOL. I can dissipate the capacitor. I can pull wires off and remove components and replace them. It's not rocket science, I just don't know what the two components in the box are and which one might be the culprit. I am assuming a switch/relay is stuck, which is what searches told me, the switch in the contactor is stuck. I'm assuming the black piece on the left. And what would the other box be?
I'll have to wait until the heat has passed, especially if I just need to remove them both and take somewhere to match. I just don't know names of things in HVAC. It's all a complete clusterF of a system in a POS trailer that leaks like a sieve was suppose to be temporary. So, no, I'm not putting more money into a new system than I can sell this POS for when I'm ready to get out. I just want to toss a $20 component in instead of spending $270 on the diagnosis, $150 on the part, and $300 to have it installed.
I do have an old man out in the middle of nowhere who I can show the component to and he will get a ladder, go up on the top of a floor to ceiling shelf, go shoulder deep to the back of the shelf, and pull something out, "yup, got one right here" with no matter what f'ed up or how old the thing is you need to replace.

The problem, the unit does not shut off. The blower shuts down when the thermostat stops calling for air. But the compressor continues to run unless I throw the breaker.
This is what it looks like inside. Searching, I see a contactor as the typical problem and it's on modern machines and doesn't have all of this. I know enough to get me in trouble, LOL. I can dissipate the capacitor. I can pull wires off and remove components and replace them. It's not rocket science, I just don't know what the two components in the box are and which one might be the culprit. I am assuming a switch/relay is stuck, which is what searches told me, the switch in the contactor is stuck. I'm assuming the black piece on the left. And what would the other box be?
I'll have to wait until the heat has passed, especially if I just need to remove them both and take somewhere to match. I just don't know names of things in HVAC. It's all a complete clusterF of a system in a POS trailer that leaks like a sieve was suppose to be temporary. So, no, I'm not putting more money into a new system than I can sell this POS for when I'm ready to get out. I just want to toss a $20 component in instead of spending $270 on the diagnosis, $150 on the part, and $300 to have it installed.
I do have an old man out in the middle of nowhere who I can show the component to and he will get a ladder, go up on the top of a floor to ceiling shelf, go shoulder deep to the back of the shelf, and pull something out, "yup, got one right here" with no matter what f'ed up or how old the thing is you need to replace.

