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petrapkg unit condnserfan motor
No, the unit has to operate on the voltage specified. The internal controls are all designed to operate on a 240 volt input. The motor in the air conditioner will not operate at the lower voltage and without this compressor motor operating the unit will not get cold.
If I understand your question correctly, your indoor fan motor is the one not running. If that is the case, the gurgling sound you are hearing is the refrigerant being pumped into the indoor coil. You need a new motor. If this is a gas furnace, you need a 115V motor; if it is a heatpump, you need a 230V motor.
The blower motor control unit is located on the back of the blower motor. 1. Check fuse. 2. Turn on heat and check for voltage at blower motor. Found voltage replace blower. 3. Check for supply power from the fuse on the red wire going to the blower control unit. 4. Check for a good ground on the black wire on the control unit. 5. Check for control power on the yellow wire from the climate control unit. When you select a fan speed (or the unit selects a speed in auto mode) a voltage that ranges from .4 - 9 volts is sent down the yellow wire to the blower motor control unit. 6. If all these checks are good than change the blower motor control unit. Hope this helps.
This unit is called volts.
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This is called a motor unit.
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Change the indoor filter, wipe the indoor unit down, and spray off the condenser
ummm... ...voltage?
You don`t size a condensing unit to match your indoor unit. You size it to match the rate at which your house gains heat (heat load). Then you buy a matching indoor evaporator coil and set the fan speed on the indoor unit to deliver the proper cfm to support whatever size condenser the heat load calculation says you needed.
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