It is dedicated 220v. I could connect a 110V motor as well as I have 110V in the space.It was worth a shot. I thought after that it's probably a dedicated 220v.
What's the value of the capacitor on the motor. I'll check if my ESR tester can test the size you have.It is dedicated 220v. I could connect a 110V motor as well as I have 110V in the space.
I have the day off tomorrow so I should be able to dig into this a bit further.
I actually don't know. I have to pull the covers off to see if they have markings.What's the value of the capacitor on the motor. I'll check if my ESR tester can test the size you have.
I was just going to suggest that. Recall how hot the exhaust air is into the cooler and then how cool it is on the outlet. Perhaps duct the fan on the compressor after the radiator to outside. Put an inlet vent near the bottom of the enclosure to bring in cooler air that moves up cooling things as it rises to the inlet of the fan on the compressor.Thermaled out for the fourth recharge. Motor was 117F. This leads me to think everything is fine. It's just getting too hot inside the lean-to. 230 degree air coming off the head into a small enclosed insulated space is going to warm things up quickly. Maybe an exhaust fan to suck the hot air out.
You already have a fan blowing air through the radiator right? Just duct that air outside the enclosure.Yes I think this is the problem.
I'll add some vents and figure out how to add a fan
Unfortunately the shop side of the wall the compressor is on is covered with cabinets.You already have a fan blowing air through the radiator right? Just duct that air outside the enclosure.
edit: Or even duct it into the shop instead to keep the noise away from your neighbors. The heat will help in the winter and likely not warm up the shop all that much during the summer.
What's leading me to think it's the heat is that it ran fine in the garage and outside during the winter when it was cold.I still think it's the capacitor(s). My 60 gallon Sanborn is enclosed under the stairs leading from the garage to the basement. Basically trapped between close proximity concrete walls on three sides and stair case on the third that has most of the risers blocked for sound dampening and it gets plenty warm in the garage on a hot day, high 20's for sure and mine runs fine.
As I said, I have the tester. But quick question. How old is the compressor?What's leading me to think it's the heat is that it ran fine in the garage and outside during the winter when it was cold.
I think I can test them with my new fancy pants tester. No idea how to do that though so I best do some research.
Unknown, I've had it for a year. I'd guess it's less than five years old.As I said, I have the tester. But quick question. How old is the compressor?
One is marked 150 mF, it tested at 176.9
Unfortunately the capacitance test doesn't test the ESR.Others here have more expertise than me, but my understanding is that especially with caps that size and type, the specs are pretty loose, and that a slightly greater value in this case is not going to hurt anything.