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A/C Compressor Died
Well, as you may know, I installed the Cool-N-Save device a month or so ago.
There was some scale build-up, but mostly the fins were blocked by webs and dust. I usually blast water through them to keep things efficient. 04:49 PM; 92F -- The house begins to struggle to cool down. I think it's the heat wave and the stove heating things up (first 90-Degree day). 10:36 PM; 76F -- Return home from a ballgame. Indoor temp 85F. The A/C compressor isn't running. I go out to check it out. It makes a buzzing noise every minute or so. I power-cycled the system with the same result. After disconnecting all power, I took the fan shroud off. The fan motor was blazing hot to the touch. Further, the compressor itself was HOT. I ran cool water over the compressor and it cooled-down. No scale was noted on the internal components. I put it all back together, gave it a shot, and all I heard was a buzzing noise and the heat builds again. ARGH! Darn thing's toast! Tomorrow will be Service call #4 in 3.5 years. The "experts" that installed the system failed to do so correctly:
Hopefully it's a capacitor or relay -- otherwise, I don't what to think of the cost. RH77 ("It's like a sauna in here!") |
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It's been around 100 here lately and I've found that I rarely need to use the A/C to remain comfortable. I open all the windows during the night and close them ~10:00am, block the windows the sun shines through, and turn off everything that uses electricity (TV, lights, computer, etc.). I was amazed at how stable the indoor temperature was, staying ~78F. I think the A/C is a "pamper my ass" type of luxury item, but oh is it nice when it gets 79F inside. :) Hopefully your A/C problems are fixed. I'd think with the humidity you guys get, you deserve a little pampering! :p - LostCause |
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The problem is the entire back side of the house faces West. The living room is between the West windows and the Garage. Bake Oven. It got up to 90F around 5-6pm in here. Ya kinda move to a cooler locale around the house. I got the compressor unit to run today. It's shaking like crazy and the lines are warm. The fan finally worked and the compressor, well, tried to compress -- but nothing but noise. They'll be out between 8 and Noon tomorrow :rolleyes: The unit is still under warranty by a year, but labor isn't. I'm curious to know what the deal is. If it lost the freon again... :mad: They still use the nasty Ozone Layer depleting stuff. The changeover is supposed to happen soon (2010-ish???) RH77 |
So the fan was, or was not running?
I burnt up 2 fan motors last summer. I finally realized that the contact or was corroded and not providing constant voltage. I don't know about yours but my compressor will keep running no matter how high the pressure gets; I was amazed I didn't burn it up. |
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This morning, I thought I'd give it another go. The fan and compressor both kicked-on, but it looked an unbalanced washing machine. I saw a bit of condensation on the compressor outlet on the inside -- but it stopped at the collector (or whatever it is -- could be a reverser for the heat pump). I hear from HVAC forums that capacitors and relays frequently fail -- especially on this cheap-O brand. Hopefully the compressor itself is fine, since that would require more labor ($ out-of-pocket) time. We shall see. RH77 |
You can try adding what's called a "hard start capacitor" to your compressor. They're super simple to install, two wires and you're done. If your compressor is not quite up to the task of your system, the hard start might get things going smoothly again.
I'm not sure where you'd get it, though. Johnstone is my supplier but I'm in the trades and they work with me - Johnstone doesn't generally sell to the average Joe. Look in your yellow pages under electric motors and ask around. |
Yep, it was just a Cheap-O GE capacitor that blew. The tech (and the other company I phoned earlier) reported several blown in our area. Lots of lightning strikes and probable surges.
Odd coincidence, my laptop's mem-stick fried on the same day. For some reason we get several strikes in our area. The weirdest one -- hit pretty close and knocked out a clock-radio and the circuit that turns on the light for the garage door opener. Just odd, random stuff. But ahhh -- air. The dew points were in the mid-70's last night before the storms rolled through -- then had to seal-up the house and roast. Now, there's a steady stream of "humidity" going down the drain. :thumbup: Conclusion: the Cool-N-Save likely didn't have an effect on the failure. RH77 |
LostCause -
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RH77 -
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http://www.homedecorators.com/images...rs4/casual.jpg It would have to be light enough to easily move, but sturdy enough to be outside 24/7. CarloSW2 |
RH77 -
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Are there any additional ways you can protect your A/C from power surges? CarloSW2 |
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