To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Help with Husky 60 Gallon Compressor

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Ok guys, I need some help...
A few weeks ago, I bought a Husky 60 Gallon compressor from HD to put in my basement workshop , got it down to the basement and put it under the stairs. Last weekend I did all the wiring and went to turn it on and got nothing... No hum, nothing...

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Husky-60-Gal-Stationary-Electric-Air-Compressor-C602H/205389936

I have done my a fair share of electrical wiring in the past so I'm comfortable with it and it isn't new to me. When I setup my basement shop I ran 5 new breakers/circuits. 1-30A 230V for my table saw and welder, 2-20A circuits for receptacles to power tools, 2-15A circuits one for lights and the other for receptacles.

Wiring details:
Ran a dedicated 230V line & breaker (12/2 on a 20A two pole GE slim/wafer breaker, 2 hots & a ground) The manual recommends a minimum 20A breaker and say it pulls around 16amps). It's about 20-25' from the panel. I ran the 12/2 romex to a box on the wall right by the compressor with 2.5' long 12g stranded pigtail from the pressure switch on the compressor into the box.

When the compressor wouldn't run, I tested the voltage at various points along the run. With the breaker on, I get approximately 130V on each leg at the box on the wall. I get the same voltage on each leg at the pressure switch. testing at the terminals going into the motor, With the pressure switch in the on/auto position, I get the same voltage. With the pressure switch off, I get 0 volts on each leg. Seems like I'm getting voltage all the way to the motor.

Upon this, I called "Husky" (Mat Industries), spoke with their "electrical guy" told him the testing I did and he says I probably have a bad motor. He did say that they recommend a 10/2 and a 30A breaker due to nuisance tripping when the motor turns on under load but he said the 20A should "work". I responded and said their manual mentions nothing of that and recommends a 20A breaker. I'm not arguing the point and I don't mind switching to a 30a breaker if need be, just stating they should probably put that in the manual.

You would think that if 20 was too small for the amperage when the motor kicks on, it would just trip the breaker. I'm getting nothing...

After speaking with Mat industries, The HD store manager agreed to send a couple guys to bring me a new compressor and take the "bad" one away since I don't live far from the store. Last night they swapped them out. I wired up the new one and still get nothing... Could I have another bad compressor motor? Or am I doing something wrong? or a bad breaker? I'm stumped...

Should I move up to a 30A breaker? I thought about taking the lead/plug off my welder and wiring it up to plug the compressor into that 30A Circuit since it's on that same wall and I know it works.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

teamo

Member
Joined
Nov 28, 2015
Messages
17
If the breaker is not tripping and you are getting the correct 230 volts at the motor leads then it is either a bad motor or it is wired incorrectly. You say that you got approx. 130 volts on each leg but did you test for the 230 volts on both leads? Did you use the correct 2 pole breaker? You could have the correct voltage on each lead to ground and still be on the same leg of the circuit phase which would not give you 230 volts for the circuit.
 

pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
Don't check the power on each line to ground. Check across the two line to make sure you have 240V. If you get zero then the breaker needs to be moved to a different space.

Edit: Didn't mean to sound like a parrot. I was typing slower than teamo.
 
Last edited:
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
If the breaker is not tripping and you are getting the correct 230 volts at the motor leads then it is either a bad motor or it is wired incorrectly. You say that you got approx. 130 volts on each leg but did you test for the 230 volts on both leads? Did you use the correct 2 pole breaker? You could have the correct voltage on each lead to ground and still be on the same leg of the circuit phase which would not give you 230 volts for the circuit.

Interesting... How would I test both legs at the same time with my multimeter?

I grabbed what I thought was the only 20A 2 pole thin series breaker they had at HD.

I don't have the exact model number I bought off hand right now, I'd have to dig up the receipt but I'm pretty sure this is the one...

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000BPE71W/?tag=atomicindus08-20
 

pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
Set the multimeter to ac voltage and touch one lead to one hot and the other lead to the other hot wire at same time. You are testing across each line the same as you do when testing across one line and the ground.


The breaker is fine. You probably have it installed with both poles on the same phase.



*
 
Last edited:
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
So maybe the slot I put the breaker in is basically on the same leg of the panel?

I put it towards the bottom of the panel on the left side. There are two 15A slim breakers underneath it in the last two slots. So basically counting from the bottom-up the breaker is in slots 3-4 of the tandem/slim slots at the bottom of the panel.
 

sld961

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 28, 2015
Messages
395
So maybe the slot I put the breaker in is basically on the same leg of the panel?

I put it towards the bottom of the panel on the left side. There are two 15A slim breakers underneath it in the last two slots. So basically counting from the bottom-up the breaker is in slots 3-4 of the tandem/slim slots at the bottom of the panel.
Yes, if there are two thin breakers below it, they are likely both on the same leg of the power, meaning that your double pole has both poles on the same leg. You'll have to move one of the slim breakers up so the double pole is in the middle and hits both legs.
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Yes, if there are two thin breakers below it, they are likely both on the same leg of the power, meaning that your double pole has both poles on the same leg. You'll have to move one of the slim breakers up so the double pole is in the middle and hits both legs.

Awesome, Makes perfect sense! Thanks for the help guys! I'll swap them around when I get home from work.
 

pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
So if it ends up being you have the breaker installed wrong are you going to call the HD people and tell them the compressor they hauled back to the store is not bad? :lol_hitti
 

gungatim

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 8, 2013
Messages
8,101
Location
west mich
"12/2 on a 20A two pole GE slim/wafer breaker, 2 hots & a ground"

I don't think that's a 220v breaker, it's 2 - 120 on same leg, basically what others said but to clarify, you bought the wrong type breaker...
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
So if it ends up being you have the breaker installed wrong are you going to call the HD people and tell them the compressor they hauled back to the store is not bad? :lol_hitti

Lol yeah, and probably buy the two guys who came to swap them out last night a beer. :lol_hitti
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Looking at a diagram of the GE panel online, I definitely think I have both on the same leg.

The "Normal" slots alternate so it's basically impossible to have a two pole "normal" breaker on the same leg. however the tandem/thin slots are grouped in twos. I'm pretty sure I'm running both on the same leg.
 

dw1

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2015
Messages
1,335
Location
Ky
Just to clear up a little confusion, if you pull your breaker and look at the part that fits down onto the bus in the panel, is there one or two stabs there, sounds like you have a twin breaker installed, giving you 120 volts to ground (On both screws) but not 240v. You need a double pole breaker, what brand of panel do you have? can you take a pic of your panel and your breaker, that way it can be easy diagnosed.
 

dw1

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2015
Messages
1,335
Location
Ky
Yes, if there are two thin breakers below it, they are likely both on the same leg of the power, meaning that your double pole has both poles on the same leg. You'll have to move one of the slim breakers up so the double pole is in the middle and hits both legs.

Missed this one, if above applies, can you adjust breakers where you can fit a double pole in there, two different breakers feeding a machine is not allowed or a good idea safety wise, these breakers need a handle tie when it is turned off, both sides open.
 

pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
"12/2 on a 20A two pole GE slim/wafer breaker, 2 hots & a ground"

I don't think that's a 220v breaker, it's 2 - 120 on same leg, basically what others said but to clarify, you bought the wrong type breaker...

If he bought the two pole he linked to, he got the correct breaker.
 

md21722

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2015
Messages
1,840
Location
Mt Juliet, TN
Sounds like you need a "two pole" breaker. This will take up 2 slots in your panel. If using the "slim line" / tandem breakers where you have two circuits in one slot, or four circuits in two slots, then you don't have the right breaker. The motor isn't starting at all because between the two hots on the same split phase there is no voltage differential, therefore 0V. Between one hot and ground you would get 120V and between two hots you would get 240V.
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Missed this one, if above applies, can you adjust breakers where you can fit a double pole in there, two different breakers feeding a machine is not allowed or a good idea safety wise, these breakers need a handle tie when it is turned off, both sides open.

yep. It's definitely a two pole breaker. The two "switches" are tied together with a bar.

GE makes slim line two pole breakers. They're just like a standard two pole breaker, they just take up the same space as a single standard breaker. There are specific slots at the bottom of the panel for the slim line breakers.

My panel is a newer GE panel. The house is a little over a year old. Construction was completed in Dec 2014.
 

gungatim

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 8, 2013
Messages
8,101
Location
west mich
If he bought the two pole he linked to, he got the correct breaker.

Assuming he has the correct box that is...a slim line is 1/2 the size, are all the other breakers 1/2"? if so it would be right, unless the box Is goofed up...all the OP has to do is pull the breaker and make sure the 2 stabs hit 2 separate blades not one long one, each blade from the respective feeder...
 

justsam

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 20, 2010
Messages
1,267
Location
Penngrove, California
Set the multimeter to ac current and touch one lead to one hot and the other lead to the other hot wire at same time. You are testing across each line the same as you do when testing across one line and the ground.


The breaker is fine. You probably have it installed with both poles on the same phase.



*

I suspect the outcome of measuring AC CURRENT, with the probes as suggested would be interesting.

I know you meant AC VOLTAGE!
 

nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
31,928
Location
Coronado, CA
I realize that I am "piling on", but you need to measure "Line to Line" not line to ground or line to neutral.
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Alright gents, looks like the assumptions were correct. I just switched the breakers around by moving the dual pole down a slot and we have power!
 
Last edited:
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Someone needs to go to that HD and see if they have it on discount for having a bad motor. :D


I bet the compressors are on vendor consignment (hd doesn't technically own them) since they carry very few of them. I'll ask my father in law. He works on the MET team in a store. He got bored about 6 months into retirement and decided to get a part time gig at a HD store.
 

wyliesdiesels

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2012
Messages
19,994
Location
Modesto, CA
The 20a breaker might hold.

However, the wire needs to be either #10 THHN or #8/2 NM-b.

EDIT: Mixed this up with another thread. Was thinking this was a 5HP. So u need #12 THHN or #10/2 NM-b.

If farther than 50' and not within sight of the breaker panel then u need a disconnect next to compressor. If the comp has a cord and plug then that counts as a disconnect.
 
Last edited:

pattenp

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 4, 2008
Messages
10,175
Location
Virginia - USA
The 20a breaker might hold.

However, the wire needs to be either #10 THHN or #8/2 NM-b.

If farther than 50' and not within sight of the breaker panel then u need a disconnect next to compressor. If the comp has a cord and plug then that counts as a disconnect.

Why does the wire need to be that high of an amp rating?
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
The 20a breaker might hold.

However, the wire needs to be either #10 THHN or #8/2 NM-b.

EDIT: Mixed this up with another thread. Was thinking this was a 5HP. So u need #12 THHN or #10/2 NM-b.

If farther than 50' and not within sight of the breaker panel then u need a disconnect next to compressor. If the comp has a cord and plug then that counts as a disconnect.


The 20amp breaker has held so far. Haven't tripped it. Because I was using a 20a breaker, I ran 12/2 nmb wire. It's only about 25' of wire (10-12' away from the panel) and I haven't drywalled the workshop yet so it's still open studs. Re-wiring is no big deal.
 
OP
M

Macgyver_ga

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 28, 2011
Messages
265
Location
Canton, GA
Here she is in her home.



I only had one leak in my air lines when I tested the system and it was at the manifold. I have three different lines running. one that runs to a quick disconnect near my workbench with a tee running to a 25' retractable reel above my tablesaw outfeed/assembly table. This will be line that's used the most often. The other line runs to the opposite corner of the shop and has a ball valve at the manifold so I can shut it off when it's not used. The 3rd line runs upstairs to the garage to a 50' retractable reel. It has a ball valve at the manifold too so I shut it off when not needed.

 

wyliesdiesels

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 14, 2012
Messages
19,994
Location
Modesto, CA
The 20amp breaker has held so far. Haven't tripped it. Because I was using a 20a breaker, I ran 12/2 nmb wire. It's only about 25' of wire (10-12' away from the panel) and I haven't drywalled the workshop yet so it's still open studs. Re-wiring is no big deal.

Technically because its 3HP and because #12 NM-b is limited to 20a, it needs to be wired with #10 NM-b or #12 THHN in conduit
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom