Hi all,
I've got this Harbor Freight compressor for about 4 hard, at times, years. It never wanted to start in cold weather (45F and below), it would trip the thermal switch. It was never a problem since I don't do much work in these temperatures anyway. If I had to start it I'd just use a heatgun on the head of the compressor for 20 seconds and it would start right up.
Up until this week. It will not start. I noticed it pulls 40 amps and turns slowly until the thermal switch pops. I thought the switch was giving up too early and bypassed it. Now it trips the breaker.
I took the capacitor off and reinstalled. It worked! For 1 cycle. Now it doesn't start.
I thought the capacitor was bad, replaced it and still no start.
It does start though if I remove the high pressure relief valve. And, although tricky, if I reinstall when it is running it keeps running. If I shut it off it won't start again. I can sp[in the motor by hand just fine. The compressor head doesn't seem to bind.
I'm leaning to believe the starter coil switch is bad, taking more speed than needed to shutoff. If it even has a starter coil switch (I think every motor has one?).... However, I think if the centrifugal switch was bad, the motor would actually spin fast, but trip the breaker because of the high load. The motor doesn't spin fast (with load) at all.
Os maybe the starting coil itself is bad?
This is the compressor:
And this brass valve on the head is the bypass valve that when not in place makes the compressor start:
I've got this Harbor Freight compressor for about 4 hard, at times, years. It never wanted to start in cold weather (45F and below), it would trip the thermal switch. It was never a problem since I don't do much work in these temperatures anyway. If I had to start it I'd just use a heatgun on the head of the compressor for 20 seconds and it would start right up.
Up until this week. It will not start. I noticed it pulls 40 amps and turns slowly until the thermal switch pops. I thought the switch was giving up too early and bypassed it. Now it trips the breaker.
I took the capacitor off and reinstalled. It worked! For 1 cycle. Now it doesn't start.
I thought the capacitor was bad, replaced it and still no start.
It does start though if I remove the high pressure relief valve. And, although tricky, if I reinstall when it is running it keeps running. If I shut it off it won't start again. I can sp[in the motor by hand just fine. The compressor head doesn't seem to bind.
I'm leaning to believe the starter coil switch is bad, taking more speed than needed to shutoff. If it even has a starter coil switch (I think every motor has one?).... However, I think if the centrifugal switch was bad, the motor would actually spin fast, but trip the breaker because of the high load. The motor doesn't spin fast (with load) at all.
Os maybe the starting coil itself is bad?
This is the compressor:
And this brass valve on the head is the bypass valve that when not in place makes the compressor start:
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