Well I just came home and it quit again. Fan was spinning but compressor was not running. Where to look now?
How do you know the compressor is off?
Yes I believe I do.
Well it might only have the thermal overload switch open in it if it got too hot. Without doing anything to any wires run your water hose on the condenser, mainly on the compressor for a good ten to fifteen minutes.
If it was running and got too hot then running water over the compressor will cool it off enough to close that switch which is internal versus being a reset button someone can simply push.
if you don't run water over it you're looking at a possible 4-6 hours for it to cool off on it's own.
again, this is only one possibility, that the thermal overload is open.
try that and if it doesn't come on than I'll walk you through how to test the motor with continuity.
OKey dokey, water did it. It is cooling again. This is now the third time this has happened. So far we have cleaned the coil, charged the system and put a 5 2 1 hard start kit on it. What else should we do?
So now we know that your comrpessor is getting too hot which means the refrigerant levels need to be checked and the condenser coil needs to positively be cleaned. That and the evaporator.
I'm not suggesting that the windings aren't weak and the compressor is not on it's last legs as that very well could be the case (although the thermal overload switch is there to protect the compressor) but these are the reasons compressors go out; lack of air flow (restriction/dirt) through the inside (evaporator) and outside (condenser) coils and or refrigerant problems which stem from lack of air flow or leaks.
I'd sure like to know the pressures on that thing once it's running for about twenty minutes. I don't take it you have a set of refrigerant gauges, do you?
Have you check the contactor?
My uncle has gauges and he is in San Antionio. So I just left for 30 mins and came home, compressor outside was COMPLETELY OFF, air handler in the house was stilling blowing. I dont know what to do now.
Have you check the contactor?
You should not spray it down with the unit running this would cause you to push anything that is in the fins of the coil to be compacted even more into the coil. The proper way to do this is to remove the top of the unit with the power OFF! And then spray the coil from the inside out. Some hardware stores also carry mild coil cleaner that will aide you in the process of cleaning the coil. After the coil is clean, if need be you can run water through it from the outside, in. The thing to remember is that during normal operation the cond. fan motor pulls air through the outside of the coil and exhausts the air out the top so by this process everything is getting stuck and pulled into the coil from the outside in. You want to spray from the inside out as to not compact the debris further into the coil.run some water over the compressor again until it comes back on and then rinse the condenser from top to bottom on all sides and once finished do it again and again and then again. use some pressure on the water, like your thumb over the end of the hose type pressure, to remove any possible dirt from the coil (you're not rinsing the outter casing, you're trying to get the inside so spray in between the panel holes/slits from top to bottom), all while the system is running. water absorbs/removes heat better than air so while the system is running you're helping the hot vapor in the condensing coil condense into a liquid as it dissipates the heat it extracted from your living space inside. again, if your CONDENSER coil is dirty then it can't let that heat go and it's adding to the heat from the compressor simply running.
continue to run water over the condenser coils and see if after your home reaches desired set point and the system cycles completely off, both inside and outside, if it comes back on.
without gauges we can't tell exactly what is causing the compressor to overheat. if a condenser coil is dirty than the head or high pressure will be abnormally high not too mention once again it will overheat.
You should not spray it down with the unit running this would cause you to push anything that is in the fins of the coil to be compacted even more into the coil. The proper way to do this is to remove the top of the unit with the power OFF! And then spray the coil from the inside out. Some hardware stores also carry mild coil cleaner that will aide you in the process of cleaning the coil. After the coil is clean, if need be you can run water through it from the outside, in. The thing to remember is that during normal operation the cond. fan motor pulls air through the outside of the coil and exhausts the air out the top so by this process everything is getting stuck and pulled into the coil from the outside in. You want to spray from the inside out as to not compact the debris further into the coil.
How do I check that?