February 27, 2012

Do I well Need a New Air Conditioner?

So, you turn on your air conditioner to cool the place. The place does not get cool. So, you call the repairman.

He shows up. He checks your system. "I have bad news for you. Your compressor is bad," he says. "You need a new condensing unit. I can install it day after tomorrow, for 00."

You, being the clever consumer, are suspicious. "Show me," you say. So he does. The cover is off the unit and you can see the compressor. He cycles it on. You hear and see the fan start, but quite obviously the compressor is sitting there and not running. Well, whatcha gonna do? It is not running. Must be bad. So, you sign the work order, and start figuring where you will cut back to pay for this sudden and expensive repair.




Well, congratulations, sucker. You have probably been had.

Compressors do go bad, of course. But most of the time, when the compressor does not start, it is not the compressor that is at fault. So, for your information and edification, here is my list of the things that keep a compressor from starting, ranked more or less in order of frequency of occurrence, with some indication of cost and time to make a proper repair. I will stick with those cases where the fan comes on and the compressor does not; if neither fan nor compressor runs the qoute is obviously electrical and admittedly diagnosed.

Now, if you decide to try any of these repairs yourself, be certain you disconnect main power at the breaker panel before starting.

The most coarse imagine that the compressor will not start is a failed starter capacitor. This part, depending, costs in any place from to and can be purchased over the counter at any supply house. The skill level required to turn it is low. Whatever can do it, if they properly identify the part and own a screwdriver and a nut driver. Some electrical tape and/or foam rubber helps here too. The capacitor is a metal can (usually silvery, but maybe painted grey, dark green, blue, or black)located in the electrical box inside the condensing unit. It will have two or three terminals on top, each with four mounting lugs, with wires going off to the compressor and (if three terminals) also to the fan motor. It will be held in place with a strap.

The easiest way to diagnose this capacitor is by swapping it with a new part. If you have a capacitor tester, you can use it. Otherwise, just get a new one. Take off the old capacitor (do not lose track of what wires go where) and take it with you. The supply house clerk can help you get the proper new part.

When installing the new part, which may be a distinct size than the old part, the foam rubber and electrical tape may come in very handy.

The next most coarse cause of a no-start is a corroded and broken electrical connection. This may occur in any place on any of the wires related with the compressor, but often is found at the connections to the compressor itself, under the cover on the compressor. The skill level to fix this is low. Parts cost is normally under a dollar but may run more if it proves considerable to replace any wires. Pop the clip that holds the electrical cover on the compressor off, then Take off the cover. If there is a faulted wire, Take off it from the electrical box, and gently work the corroded connector off the terminal. Be truthful here; the final may also be corroded and if you break it you may find yourself with no way to make a connection to the compressor (which would require you to replace the compressor). Get an suitable crimp-on final (auto parts store, Radio Shack, or Walmart), clean up the wire, crimp the new connector onto the wire, and put it back on the final on the compressor.

The next most coarse failure is with the thermal protector inside the electrical cover on the compressor. The skill level to heal this is moderate, and to replace it the skill level is low. Any way you might have to heal it because you cannot find a replacement. Typically, wires corrode off here and you will find it considerable to solder on a new connection. Use suitable techniques (and rosin core electrical solder - not plumbers solder) and have at it. If you can find a new part, it will cost less than , typically, and saves you having to solder an old part.

Next on the list is any sequencing relays that are in the unit. These are not generally found, but exist in some units. The skill level to make this heal is moderate to high, mainly based on the requirement to properly diagnose the problem. The skill level to admittedly swap the component out is gently low.

There may be an electronic controller in the unit rather than sequencing relays. The skill level to diagnose this is high, and the skill level to replace it is moderate.

Next is the compressor itself. The skill level to diagnose this item properly is gently high. The skill level and equipment requirements to replace it are very high.

Next on the list are any pressure or climatic characteristic sensors that may be gift in the system. The skill level to diagnose and replace these is high, and the equipment required to replace them is moderate to very high, depending on the details.

Now, in some units with a lot of age on them, the compressor may run just fine when it runs, but is unable to start against the load of the system. For these you can regain a hard-start kit. This basically is a expedient that market more vigor and, when the compressor is told to start, shoots more current into it for a second (gives it a "kick in the pants"). This overloads the compressor and if sustained would burn it out, but it is not sustained. Besides, when it gets to this point, who cares if it burns out. It won't start anyway.

The hard start kit costs about and will often do the job. Of course, in this case you will probably be replacing the unit in a combine of years, but that is a combine more years for . Diagnosing this qoute correctly is a fairly high skill thing. Installing the hard start kit is a moderate skill thing.

And that is it, more or less in order. As you can see, a compressor failure is a gently low likelihood in any given case. The most coarse problems are things that just about Whatever with a basic competence with tools can fix.

Do I well Need a New Air Conditioner?

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