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Home > Archive > Home Repair forum > June 2007 > Lenox A/C repair question - Blown circuit breaker
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Lenox A/C repair question - Blown circuit breaker
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| I have a Lenox A/C, about 12 years old. - when the a/c compressor
running it trips the 30 amp circuit breaker when it recycles. It
starts from a cold start ok, but after it has been running a while, it
will trip the breaker. Any suggestions. - I know I'll have to call
a technician but I would like to have a idea of what it could be.
thanks
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| HeyBub 2007-05-28, 5:25 pm |
| jdagy wrote:
> I have a Lenox A/C, about 12 years old. - when the a/c compressor
> running it trips the 30 amp circuit breaker when it recycles. It
> starts from a cold start ok, but after it has been running a while, it
> will trip the breaker. Any suggestions. - I know I'll have to call
> a technician but I would like to have a idea of what it could be.
The cheapest thing it could be is a bad circuit breaker. For $10 you could
find out...
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| jdagy wrote:
> I have a Lenox A/C, about 12 years old. - when the a/c compressor
> running it trips the 30 amp circuit breaker when it recycles. It
> starts from a cold start ok, but after it has been running a while, it
> will trip the breaker. Any suggestions. - I know I'll have to call
> a technician but I would like to have a idea of what it could be.
>
> thanks
>
When the compressor runs, on one side the pressure goes up to maybe 250
psi and the other side it goes down to maybe 20 psi - no surprise. When
the compressor is off, the compressed refrigerant continues to flow
through the system until the pressure is equal on both sides of the
compressor. A compressor likely can't start against a large pressure
difference. When the compressor can't start it draws a high current and
trips the breaker (or an internal overload unit). This behavior is
normal (including, for example, refrigerators) when the system tries to
restart too soon. There should be enough time delay built into the
thermostat to prevent short cycling from happening.
You might want to time how long the system runs and now long it is off.
--
bud--
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| On May 29, 1:18 pm, Bud-- <remove.BudN...@isp.com> wrote:
> jdagy wrote:
>
>
> When the compressor runs, on one side the pressure goes up to maybe 250
> psi and the other side it goes down to maybe 20 psi - no surprise. When
> the compressor is off, the compressed refrigerant continues to flow
> through the system until the pressure is equal on both sides of the
> compressor. A compressor likely can't start against a large pressure
> difference. When the compressor can't start it draws a high current and
> trips the breaker (or an internal overload unit). This behavior is
> normal (including, for example, refrigerators) when the system tries to
> restart too soon. There should be enough time delay built into the
> thermostat to prevent short cycling from happening.
>
> You might want to time how long the system runs and now long it is off.
>
> --
> bud--
Bud, - thanks for the explanation, I had a tesh service it and they
found it to be over charged. Some valve was installed the wrong way,
he corrected it and it works fine.
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