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Author York Outside AC Unit - Fan stops but compressor runs
ABCManBtt199@yahoo.com

2006-04-19, 3:21 pm

Hi - Checking to see if anybody has any ideas on a root cause.

I've got two York AC units at the house - the smaller one of the two is

having problems.


The fan on the outside unit will shut off while the compressor is still

running. The only common demoniator on when it happens is on really hot

days ( in Texas ) and the compress has to run more than 30+ minutes.
The 30+ minutes is a guess becuase I've never been outside when the fan

stop - usually I notice the house getting hot and when I check the
outside unit - sure enough the fan has stopped and the compressor is
still running.


The longer history is that the first time I called the AC people when I

noticed this hapenning they replaced the fan. And I think when they
replaced it they just added their own capacitor - or something like
this - thus bypassing the main system capacitor - I think.


After the fan was replaced it still continued to do the same thing.
Another AC company came out but could not reproduce the problem.


The York model number is H2DH030S06A.


It was installed in 1996 - and ran fine until about 2 years ago.


The guts of the unit is pretty basic. On the outside unit its got the
main electrical connection box, e.g. the black thing that connects the
power and has the switch that turns the unit on. Its also got the
cylindrical capacitor ( I think ) which was replaced last year. And its

got one other component which I'm not sure what it is but it looks like

some kind of round sensor thats stuck in the side. Other than that
there is no computer modules or anything fancy.


Anybody ever seen anything like this or have a suggestion. Basically
the only thing that has not been replaced besides the compresssor ( on
the outside unit ) is the electrical black component.

Jeff Wisnia

2006-04-20, 3:21 pm

ABCManBtt199@yahoo.com wrote:
> Hi - Checking to see if anybody has any ideas on a root cause.
>
> I've got two York AC units at the house - the smaller one of the two is
>
> having problems.
>
>
> The fan on the outside unit will shut off while the compressor is still
>
> running. The only common demoniator on when it happens is on really hot
>
> days ( in Texas ) and the compress has to run more than 30+ minutes.
> The 30+ minutes is a guess becuase I've never been outside when the fan
>
> stop - usually I notice the house getting hot and when I check the
> outside unit - sure enough the fan has stopped and the compressor is
> still running.
>
>
> The longer history is that the first time I called the AC people when I
>
> noticed this hapenning they replaced the fan. And I think when they
> replaced it they just added their own capacitor - or something like
> this - thus bypassing the main system capacitor - I think.
>
>
> After the fan was replaced it still continued to do the same thing.
> Another AC company came out but could not reproduce the problem.
>
>
> The York model number is H2DH030S06A.
>
>
> It was installed in 1996 - and ran fine until about 2 years ago.
>
>
> The guts of the unit is pretty basic. On the outside unit its got the
> main electrical connection box, e.g. the black thing that connects the
> power and has the switch that turns the unit on. Its also got the
> cylindrical capacitor ( I think ) which was replaced last year. And its
>
> got one other component which I'm not sure what it is but it looks like
>
> some kind of round sensor thats stuck in the side. Other than that
> there is no computer modules or anything fancy.
>
>
> Anybody ever seen anything like this or have a suggestion. Basically
> the only thing that has not been replaced besides the compresssor ( on
> the outside unit ) is the electrical black component.
>



Is there an internal wiring diagram for the unit stuck anywhere inside
it? If you could find it, scan it and post the scan, it would be easier
for folks on this newsgroup to see if there's anything tricky about the
setup there which might cause the problem you're experiencing to happpen.

Intermittant problems like that are often a XXXXX to find, particularly
if you don't have the knowledge, experience and a voltmeter to sneak in
and locate where "the juice isn't" while the problem exists and without
shutting things down.

Random replacement of parts, as you've already learned, can be a costly
way to approach solving a problem like that which could be something as
simple as a "loose disconnection".

Jeff

--
Jeffry Wisnia

(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)

"Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented."
LinkBot





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