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motormonkey,

Another forum user Phatteus is having a similar problem See:


Stephen

Capacitors are probably the most common parts to fail in an induction motor. It would be a good idea to check the resistance of the motor windings anyway. I would expect them to be somewhere in the range of five to fifty ohms. You'll want to clean up all of the stuff that that capacitor barfed out too.
 

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MikeLocke,

If you can turn the pump by hand, the pump is probably OK. Your exploded capacitor shown is the run cap, the low uF and high voltage rating is the tip off. Well you did the right thing to go the capacitor replacement route first. You still haven't mentioned the amps while running under load. A cheap ammeter on one leg of the power will tell you a lot. What are the winding resistances? Sounds like the motor is toast but you won't know for sure without diagnosing it properly. The HP listed on your motor is "SPL" meaning a 2 to 3 actual HP output based on the 230 volts and amps drawn. Was this the original motor that came with the compressor? I bought a used compressor that had a bogus motor with "3HP" listed on it (Harbor Freight) It showed 12 amps FLA at 240 volts on the nameplate which means it actually only produces 2 HP of usable power. The previous owner went cheap with this inexpensive replacement motor to replace the original 240 volt/ 23 amp real 5HP motor. What he did not replace was the original 5 HP sized drive pulley and the overloaded compressor motor would overheat, trip thermal overload and shut off within 2 minutes running. I got a used WEG real 5HP motor and correctly sized drive pully to fix my compressor problem. Tell us the pump model so we can figure out the required motor and pulley size to use with it. That could explain the slow running issue.

Stephen

@motormonkey I did replace that capacitor. Now I think I have a bad pump. Then I thought maybe a bad motor. Now I don't know. The pump spins fine when I wheel it with my hand. The motor seems to run fine when I take the belt off but there is no load of course. When plugged up, it really struggles to get going (see video). Once it does get going, seems to build pressure. I don't want to throw too much $ at this, like buy a new motor and a new pump. I would rather put that money into a new better unit. Let me know if you have any clues please. Never mind, couldn't get the video to attach. It just shows it struggling to start to move then gets going.
@motormonkey I did replace that capacitor. Now I think I have a bad pump. Then I thought maybe a bad motor. Now I don't know. The pump spins fine when I wheel it with my hand. The motor seems to run fine when I take the belt off but there is no load of course. When plugged up, it really struggles to get going (see video). Once it does get going, seems to build pressure. I don't want to throw too much $ at this, like buy a new motor and a new pump. I would rather put that money into a new better unit. Let me know if you have any clues please. Never mind, couldn't get the video to attach. It just shows it struggling to start to move then gets going.
 

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MikeLocke,

I'm older and forget sometimes that not everyone studied electrical engineering in college or played with cars, he, he. Like to tinker and take on challenges and repairs. Raised in the sixties to be a man you had to fix the car, the water heater, the furnas, the TV etc. today to be a man you just need a good credit rating lol. things are harder to fix these days and parts are even harder to find. Good luck with your repair, sounds like you'll solve this one, kudos for the effort!

Stephen

Thanks Stephen. I appreciate the help and your time explaining things. You have some good understanding of this, and I do not. Rather, I know a little about everything but not all about anything. It's the original motor, yes. I will go out there later and check those things mentioned.
 

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MikeLocke,

A generator needs to be 3 to 4 times more wattage than the compressor load so with a 15amp electric motor at start (LRA) will draw 6 to 10 times it's FLA listed on the motor. So a generator that can steadily put out 50 to 60 amps is required to start the 15 FLA motor under load. If you get a replacement motor make sure its the same volts, FLA (full load amps) and RPM. A lower RPM motor can be used but the drive pulley and belt has to be changed.
a 240 volt only "SPL HP" motor usually is sold as a "5 to 6HP" marketed compressor by Loews, Sears or Sanborn, they usually draw 15 amps at 240 volts and produce an actual 3HP output. At 9.5 to 10 amps measured under load that translates to about 1.5 HP actual motor output. your motor sounds a bit weak for a compressor unless it was originally a 1.5 HP dual voltage model 120/240 volts. Running a compressor at 120 volt at 20 amps is not very useful, pops breakers, overheats plugs, melts outlets, etc. Your model and make of compressor will narrow down your selection of replacement motors and the cost as well.
My kid asks me questions all of the time, I never say "that's a dumb question". Gave her my old cell phone and when stumped with some question I just say "honey, I don't know everything in the world, Google search on your phone" I try to reward her curiosity not discourage it!

Stephen

I told my boys to either pay attention to what I'm doing and learn how to fix things...or make a lot of money so you can pay someone else to do your man work. So far, they haven't done either one and didn't listen to a thing I said. Back to the issue...about 9.5 -10A on each side with inductive. Comes to maybe 3 or so if I am close. Matches up. I found a motor that looks like it should work perfect. I'll give that as try! I think I screwed the motor up years ago when I did some very improper wiring just to get it up temporarily...involving a couple regular extension cords running to a couple different 15A circuits and maybe a generator. I just remembered that. I remember it smoking some at the time periodically.
 

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MikeLocke,

I didn't see the FLA on your motor picture but I bet its 15 or 16 FLA amps a leg or a 3 HP actual output motor. 10 amps is just too low unless there is 0 psi in the tank. You reach the FLA listed on the motor at the end of a fill cycle just before the pressure switch cuts off. Measuring either leg works, they are 180 electrical degrees of each other so both should be the same amps. Sounds like you are learning a lot!

Stephen

Thanks. Well I may have checked the amps incorrectly. I just used an inductive meter and clamped on to the first hot lead (~120) and then the second 120. Each showed about 10A.
 
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