Stop it, remove it from the system, get it thouroughly checked before re deploying.
It is due to pressure rising due to a bad condenser fan motor, bad capacitor, obstructing of airflowat the condenser, or a dirty condnser.
If a motor is spinning under no load, it is storing some energy in the rotating mass. This energy can be stored and released in the same way capacitors and inductors store and release energy. This is what a synchronous motor acting like a condenser is doing. The way it appears to the power system is dependent upon the field current applied to it. If used as a motor, this is controlled to keep it spinning at the desired speed under load. If used as a condenser, it is controlled to determine whether it will be releasing power ahead of or behind the power system (absorbing or releasing VARs).
Most likely, yes. The ultimate test is if it can be pushed in either direction and it stays running in that direction.
Dirty condenser coil, high ambient temperature, problem with condenser fan, overcharge, non condensibles, high indoor load are the first places I would look. In that order.
Unlike a static condenser (capacitor bank), the value of reactive power from a synchronous condenser can be continuously adjusted. A synchronous condenser also has other advantages over static condensers such as: - not being affecting by harmonics (some harmonics can even be absorbed by a synch condenser) - producing no switching transients
plug out the line. chek the wireng.'
a synchronous condenser is over excited synchronous motor under no load
I would take it to Jacob Black.
series
This motor has no distributor. It has a coil pack for each spark plug. There is no condenser.
check to see if your lowon freon
number of things. you could have a bad condenser fan motor. bad contactor or a bad run cap for the condenser fan motor.
Yes. A shorted condenser will load the electrical supply and prevent the starter from creating the mechanical force necessary to turn over a motor.
petrapkg unit condnserfan motor
It is due to pressure rising due to a bad condenser fan motor, bad capacitor, obstructing of airflowat the condenser, or a dirty condnser.
There is an electrical drawing on the motor that tells you how to wire it.
No, it's part of the air conditioning system.